Work Won't Love You Back

How Devotion to Our Jobs Keeps Us Exploited, Exhausted, and Alone

audio cd, 1 pages

Published Jan. 26, 2021 by Bold Type Books, Hachette B and Blackstone Publishing.

ISBN:
978-1-5491-6278-7
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4 stars (12 reviews)

9 editions

An exhaustive exploration

4 stars

Probably not the book for me because I was already in agreement with pretty much the whole thesis, so revisiting arguments and anecdotes on "How Devotion to Our Jobs Keeps Us Exploited" wasn't super engaging or entertaining. The book contains a lot more testimonials and personal accounts than I expected, which might make sense for a target audience but it's not my jam. For someone not so into history, sociology, anthropology etc this might be a heavy read, it really goes from ground up on many intersectional topics.

I think this book is a great introduction to the issue and I recommend a read to help recent startup/corporate survivors to process their grief. I did find the ending a bit watery; the author had hundreds of pages to deconstruct the employee identity but gave themselves a few paragraphs to try to end on a positive note. Not very successful to …

Review of "Work Won't Love You Back" on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

What I learned from this book : it's okay to not love my job. I should try expending less mental energy on this - love people, not work. This was a fascinating overview of ways in which people fight to have their work valued as work, as well as the dangers of conflating the necessity of having to work with "loving" the work you do. Emotional burnout is a thing, and if the pandemic taught me anything it's that there are truly no "essential" workers, only essential jobs. 

for the burntout

4 stars

this book delivers what it promises but was more deeply researched and expansive than I expected—rolls in labor history, ones relationship to work, social programs, etc, to paint a picture of a cultivated and toxic modern relationship to work. was a concrete way to tie in theory, history, and work malaise, though I lost a bit of interest toward the end and petered out about 3/4 of the way through

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