Klik på en miniature for at gå til Google Books
Indlæser... Big Wheel at the Cracker Factory (udgave 2008)af Mickey Hess (Forfatter)
Work InformationBig wheel at the cracker factory af Mickey Hess
Ingen Indlæser...
Bliv medlem af LibraryThing for at finde ud af, om du vil kunne lide denne bog. Der er ingen diskussionstråde på Snak om denne bog. Mickey Hess alternates between descriptions of slackerism so deep as to be tragic and truly touching scenes, like a moment of deep spiritual connection with a pet iguana. I had no idea what to expect when the book began, but by the end I was fully drawn into the quirky worldview Hess espouses. My actual rating is more like 3 1/2 stars. I won my copy through First Reads. I loved the cover of this book! Just reminded me of a box of Ritz crackers! The book is about anything but crackers, though! It is about searching for what we want to be when we grow up, and finding that what we want to be isn't always what we thought it was. It's about doing the job we work and study hard for, and finding that other jobs are necessary to fill in the gaps. It's about finding jobs, and looking for meaning in what we do. Sometimes funny, and always thoughtful and inspiring, I enjoyed this book. Mickey Hess has let us into his life for a year of working, going to school, and all his doubts and wonderings about what he wants to do when he grows up. He gives us his insights with a down to earth humour I found very engaging. If you've ever questioned where you're going next in your life and career, try this book. You'll find you're not alone. ingen anmeldelser | tilføj en anmeldelse
"Big Wheel at the Cracker Factory" is about choosing what you want to be when you grow up, and finding out you still have to wait tables on the weekends. The story follows one year in the life of an adjunct instructor who takes on side jobs as an ice cream man, stand-up comedian, haunted house character, and Billy Graham Crusader. With college enrolment and tuition costs at record highs, universities are staffing their courses with part-time instructors who commute between different schools to make a living. Big Wheel follows one year in the life of an adjunct instructor who takes on side jobs as an ice cream man, stand-up comedian, haunted house character, and Billy Graham Crusader. The jobs begin out of financial necessity, but become more of a diversion from a teaching career that Hess fears he is starting to take far more seriously than this employers are taking him. No library descriptions found. |
Current DiscussionsIngen
Google Books — Indlæser... GenrerMelvil Decimal System (DDC)378.12092Social sciences Education Higher education Organization and management; curriculums Teaching staff; Faculty BiographiesLC-klassificeringVurderingGennemsnit:
Er det dig?Bliv LibraryThing-forfatter. |
[Review originally published in 2008 in Razorcake Magazine]
Is it possible to find a job you love and not let it take over your life? Does a person need a “career” in order to live a fulfilled life? Does work always have to define one’s identity? Mickey Hess feels these questions hammering in his head constantly. Coincidentally, so do I, as do probably a whole host of other Gen Xers. It’s almost as if we have been conditioned to distrust the paths that so many of our parents traveled. The concept of choosing a field and devoting one’s entire life to working in that field seems almost incomprehensible. And, yet, that is what Mickey Hess feels is happening to him.
Hess is a part-time college instructor. He sometimes teaches at three different universities in one day in an effort to make ends meet. In addition to juggling multiple teaching gigs, he takes odd jobs on the side, none of which he manages to keep for more than a couple of months. Hess waits tables, works at a giant indoor amusement park, drives an ice cream truck, and performs stand-up comedy. At one point, he even gets a job at a Billy Graham Crusade, where he spends most of his time handing out his own homemade fliers advertising fictitious Billy Graham corndogs.
As these jobs increase in absurdity, Hess realizes that he’s using them, in part, to distract himself from the decision he needs to make: should he commit to fulfilling his desire to be a college professor? All around him, his friends are going through the same process: struggling with how they spend their time, mired in the details of preparing for careers they’re not even sure they want. At one point, Hess confesses, “I’ve never made any strong decisions that have brought me to where I am now.” When I read that, I knew exactly what he meant.
In the wrong hands, these familiar themes that Hess grapples with might not make for such engaging reading. However, Mickey Hess is a likeable guy and he spins a colorful story. His sincerity and subtle humor preclude any chance of self-pity entering this tale. Hess easily garners the reader’s sympathy. It’s not that he is lazy or has a poor work ethic; after all, he spends hours working on his own writing. But he likes to enjoy his life, to spend time with his friends and family, and he hasn’t figured out how work fits into the equation. It’s a common problem that many of us deal with on a daily basis.
In the end, Hess makes a decision, although it doesn’t seem any stronger than any of the previous ones he’s described. His new situation leads him to pose new questions, and it’s clear that he’s probably still a long way off from getting it all figured out. But that’s okay, because these are monumental questions and he’s got his whole lifetime ahead to grapple with them. And, meanwhile, the rest of us can take comfort in knowing we’re not the only ones asking, “Where does it all end?” ( )