book data
938 ratings, 3.17 average rating, 181 reviews
(more data...)
edit
published
2006
by Granta Books
binding
Paperback, 256 pages
isbn
1862078971
(isbn13: 9781862078970)
Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Be the first to start one »
friend reviews
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
This book is currently not featured on any Listopia lists.
Add this book to your favorite list »
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1310)
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
The self-righteous
OK, so it may be that the blue and pink collar work force is easier to love than middle management. It may be that the real heroism in this country is found closer to the poverty line then to middle management. Certainly, it is clear that Barbara Ehrenreich believes this to be true. A comparison of Bait and Switch with her earlier Nickel and Dimed demonstrated that while Ehrenreich finds much to lament in the plight of the working class, she generally finds the corporate world laughable and the ...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
6 comments
Read in May, 2006
From a blog post I wrote in 2006:
I was looking forward to reading Barbara Ehrenreich's latest tome, Bait and Switch: The (Futile) Pursuit of the American Dream. I really enjoyed Nickel and Dimed in which the author took on several minimum wage type jobs and tried to live on her salary. Her latest effort is a look at what the white collar folks go through when they get laid off/fired from their relatively high paying jobs.
It wasn't the story I thought it would be. I expected her to go thr...more
I was looking forward to reading Barbara Ehrenreich's latest tome, Bait and Switch: The (Futile) Pursuit of the American Dream. I really enjoyed Nickel and Dimed in which the author took on several minimum wage type jobs and tried to live on her salary. Her latest effort is a look at what the white collar folks go through when they get laid off/fired from their relatively high paying jobs.
It wasn't the story I thought it would be. I expected her to go thr...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
readanddisliked
Read in January, 2005
recommends it for:
Revisionist die-hards
Ehrenreich posits that, no matter your education or previous track record of success in the white collar world, you are not assured of a stable economic future.
While her premise is correct, it is neither groundbreaking nor well-presented. Many of the sources cited in the book are 10 or more years old, indicating that the reality of the increasingly “downwardly mobile” economy is one with deep roots. Yet this work is surprisingly shallow in its views.
Undercover, trying to break into...more
While her premise is correct, it is neither groundbreaking nor well-presented. Many of the sources cited in the book are 10 or more years old, indicating that the reality of the increasingly “downwardly mobile” economy is one with deep roots. Yet this work is surprisingly shallow in its views.
Undercover, trying to break into...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
non-fiction
While I didn't agree with all of the points raised in Nickel & Dimed, I enjoyed it. I wish I could say the same for this book. Maybe I took things a bit too personally but working in public relations I was insulted that Barbara thinks she can easily step into a director's position in PR with a made up resume and absolutely no contacts in the industry. But she approaches every "adventure" in job searching with snobbish disdain. I agree that it's hard for people to find jobs in Amer...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
non-fiction
Read in October, 2006
Question: As she sets it out in her introduction, the goal of this book is to show what it takes to find a white-collar job in America. So the question now for me is, did she fail because she did not find a job? This is one of those books that, although it's certainly well-written and -observed, I wonder what the big revelation is supposed to be. Corporate jobs (and even the effort needed to find one) are soul-crushing. Large corporations do not reward creativity or independent thinking. And?? T...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
recommends it for:
people who are curious about social economics
Why do I do this to myself? I feel this guilt that requires me to finish a book, even when doing so makes my blood pressure skyrocket. I wasn't a big fan of Nickel and Dimed, so why would I think it'd be any different when Ehrenreich is piously judging the middle class?
In short, the author "goes undercover" to try to land a middle class executive PR job, with a minimum salary of $50,000. She creates a somewhat fictitious resume - she has a background in "event planning&quo...more
In short, the author "goes undercover" to try to land a middle class executive PR job, with a minimum salary of $50,000. She creates a somewhat fictitious resume - she has a background in "event planning&quo...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
non-fiction
Read in August, 2008
This was exasperating and sad. The author (who wrote Nickel and Dimed) goes undercover to research what it is like to be a white collar worker who loses his/her job and needs to find another one. It's funny sometimes to see how the corporate world lives and what it believes and the games that people play (use the correct buzz words, know the right people), but it also makes me so mad. Obtaining a good education and working hard are not enough. It was also interesting to see all the "coache...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
memoir,
social-criticism
Read in December, 2005
Well, jeez. This paints a portrait of the working world even more bleak than that offered in Nickel and Dimed. The service industry jobs Ehrenreich took in her previous book at least offered chances for camaraderie, a sense that "we're all in this together." This one not only dispels illusions about opportunities for advancement in the American hierarchy, given hard work, but also conveys a sense of the pitiful loneliness of a job search where those around you are indifferent at...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in December, 2008
recommended to Agnes by:
Annie & Dave (?) Can't remember whom I got it from)recommends it for: Aspiring coaches, the jobless, those looking to move to a new job
A solid read, this book chronicles Ehrenreich's quest to get a mid-career white-collar job without relying on her connections (or fame - she changes back to her maiden name to go undercover). Not as brilliant as her "Nickel and Dimed" about the blue-collar workforce, but interesting and horrifying in its own way. I really hope no one I know who has a college degree and 15-20 years of work experience in a white-collar field ever gets laid off because finding another job that is not co...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
non-fiction,
social-issues
Read in October, 2008
This book was giving me heartburn and I've never done anything like the white collar workers whose job search Ehrenreich participates in. Anytime freelance work seems difficult, I'll just recall any number of the stories from this book:
Job coaches and their ridiculous personality tests (and yes, puppets too) / never ending resume corrections / encouragement to promote yourself beyond your true skills / and their fees.
Groups of fellow job searchers which offer little help but still look ...more
Job coaches and their ridiculous personality tests (and yes, puppets too) / never ending resume corrections / encouragement to promote yourself beyond your true skills / and their fees.
Groups of fellow job searchers which offer little help but still look ...more
Like this review?
yes
2 comments
Read in April, 2006
I loved this book. In it, Ehrenreich explores unemployment and desparation not from the perspective of uneducated and chronically destitute blue-collar workers, but from that of educated and accomplished white collar professionals squeezed out of their cushy positions by downsizing. She changes her name, lines up colleagues to provide phony references, and dives into the applicant pool as a public relations expert looking for a nice middle management job.
Ehrenreich’s wry sense of humor and...more
Ehrenreich’s wry sense of humor and...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in April, 2008
I didn't actually finish this book... i feel like i was bait and switched. I really liked nickel and dimed and now i understand why the back of the book is filled with praise for nickel and dimed. Sorry barbara, but i was almost halfway through and kept asking myself if this was going anywhere. The book seemed to only relay a message about the exploitive hacks, who themselves were barely not unemployed, that fill a niche market praying on desperately unemployed (and unconfident) people's hop...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
nonfiction
Read in February, 2008
Disappointing follow-up to Nickel and Dimed, in which she tries and fails to take on the problem of corporate life. Instead, she spends 9 months researching and documenting the job search process. Unlike some critics, I never had problems with Ehrenreich's methodology in the earlier book, but here her approach seems both naive and disingenuous. She says she is open to a job anywhere (she seems oddly fixated on Atlanta); yet we never s...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
non-fiction,
own
Read in February, 2008
I should have known better, I took issue with Nickel and Dimed as well.
It seems that Ehrenreich condescends to any group she studies. She purports to be "undercover" and "living the life" of her subjects, but she never seems believable or even very respectful of those she is imitating.
This book seemed even more ridiculous seeing as how she never actually EXPERIENCES the world she is discussing. It chronicles her fruitless search for a job including all her interactio...more
It seems that Ehrenreich condescends to any group she studies. She purports to be "undercover" and "living the life" of her subjects, but she never seems believable or even very respectful of those she is imitating.
This book seemed even more ridiculous seeing as how she never actually EXPERIENCES the world she is discussing. It chronicles her fruitless search for a job including all her interactio...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in October, 2007
Anyone familiar with the premise of Barbara Ehrenreich’s best selling work knows about her undercover, first hand look at low paying blue and pink collar labor. In Nickel and Dimed, she actually worked at the jobs she covers in the book and she also discusses her co-workers and her bosses. In Bait and Switch, Ehrenreich takes the same approach with white collar professionals looking for work. The prospects, as Ehrenreich finds through empirical research (the same kind employed in...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Ehrenreich goes undercover again. This time not as the low-wage worker of Nickel and Dimed, but as a professional looking for a job that can secure her firmly as middle-class. She starts the book with sweeping socio-politico-economic claims, but offers little more than how hard it is to find a job. She tries to draw grand conclusions from her failure to find a job, but she’s stretching it a bit too much.
Although the book is disappointing in its main claims, it does contain a lot of good p...more
Although the book is disappointing in its main claims, it does contain a lot of good p...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in June, 2007
Under no circumstances should you read this book without a stable job.
I liked it and enjoyed it (even while being underemployed) but I wish that she had framed the book a little differently. She spends most of her time looking for a job, hiring consultants and attending conferences meant to improve her chances of finding a job in the white collar world as a PR consultant.
She learns a ton about white-collar corporate culture and discovers it has its own pitfalls as much as the blue colla...more
I liked it and enjoyed it (even while being underemployed) but I wish that she had framed the book a little differently. She spends most of her time looking for a job, hiring consultants and attending conferences meant to improve her chances of finding a job in the white collar world as a PR consultant.
She learns a ton about white-collar corporate culture and discovers it has its own pitfalls as much as the blue colla...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
non-fiction
Read in October, 2007
Similar to her hands-on investigation of life as a blue collar wage earner in Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich proceeds to explore the white collar profession by attempting to find a job. The catch is she never actually succeeds in finding a job, so the entire book is about the culture of the white collar unemployed as Ehrenreich attends career coaching, networking events and job fairs. While I enjoyed Nickel and Dimed, this book grew irritating after awhile. Ehrenreich is highly critical an...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in March, 2007
Fresh from investigating the plight of minimum-wage earners in America, Barbara Ehrenreich sets her sights on the issues facing well-educated, middle-class workers. Ehrenreich uses her work experience to craft an honest resume of an "alternate persona" and apply for PR/Communications jobs across the country. She doesn't find any. For 200 pages. What she does find are a number of "Executive Training" classes billed as job-seeking seminars. For around $1000, these courses offer...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in March, 2006
After the release of her best-selling Nickel and Dimed, an undercover journey to document the struggles of blue-collar employment, Barbara Ehrenreich was constantly approached with the question: what about the fall of the middle class? What about the laid-off executive who can no longer support a family, or the engineering graduate behind the counter at Starbucks? These were the motivated workers who supposedly did everything right and are now sinking toward the poverty line. In Bait and Switch,...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment




















