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Average rating5
What do a playwright, a vegan butcher, and an alpaca farmer all have in common? Two popular columnists take us behind the scenes in interviews with twenty-eight workers doing something they love. With care and delight, New York Times columnists Shaina Feinberg and Julia Rothman take readers all over the world to explore the furthest reaches of passion and dedication in this collection of interviews. Meet a wildland firefighter, a surfer, a ferry captain, a designer of headscarves, an accessibility specialist, and many other real people doing the creative, fascinating, and often difficult jobs that make the world work. This ode to the wild and limitless range of job possibilities also includes thought-provoking questions designed to open conversations with young readers, as well as tips on how they might conduct an interview themselves. Featuring Julia Rothman's captivating, detailed artwork drawn from real scenes and photos, Work is a work of inspiration and joy that honors people everywhere who love the work that they do.
Reviews with the most likes.
Move over, Tuttle Twins, this is the kid lit about work we so desperately need. This book compiles interviews with people who have unique jobs, all over the world. They talk about the skills their work involves, what drew them to it or inspires them, its challenges and meaning.
Featured are real people who transport giraffes in trucks full of trees for them to snack on, Irish beeswax candle makers, a couple who runs an antique toy store in the Bronx. Indigenous tour guides, Dutch flower farmers, Indian muralists, a Korean designer who loves knitting furniture out of rope. People who drive ferries, repair instruments, increase accessibility, take good care of alpacas. A woman who got so sick of having poor experiences with car repair that she became a mechanic herself, and is helping other women do the same.
The book ends with the author and illustrator each describing their own jobs, and includes a guide for interviewing people yourself, a glossary, and open-ended prompts throughout the book.
In a chaotic world full of overnight Amazon deliveries and generative AI “art,” this book is a refreshing depiction of slow living, small business, sustainability, and finding pursuits that allow us to live our values. Also, and perhaps most importantly, I must try a bagel with ricotta and fresh figs in honor of Joe Bagel himself.