![]() She had never visited Missoula, but she imagined it as paradise. Throughout, Land has been sustained by her fierce love for her daughter and her dreams of becoming a professional writer and escaping northwest Washington state by settling in the seemingly desirable city of Missoula, Montana. Some of the most memorable scenes recount the shaming Land received when using the food stamps to purchase groceries. The author is especially detailed and insightful on the matter of government-issued food stamps. Though the benefits received by Land and her daughter after mountains of paperwork never led to financial stability, they did ameliorate near starvation. Purposefully or otherwise, the narrative also offers a powerful argument for increasing government benefits for the working poor during an era when most benefits are being slashed. For readers who believe individuals living below the poverty line are lazy and/or intellectually challenged, this memoir is a stark, necessary corrective. The relentlessly depressing, quotidian narrative maintains its power due to Land's insights into working as an invisible maid inside wealthy homes her self-awareness as a loving but inadequate mother to her infant and her struggles to survive domestic violence. The author did not grow up in poverty, but her struggles slowly evolved after her parents divorced, remarried, and essentially abandoned her after she gave birth to a daughter fathered by a man who never stopped being abusive and after her employment prospects narrowed to dirty jobs with absurdly low hourly pay. * Starred Review */ First-time author Land chronicles her years among the working poor as a single mother with only a high school diploma trying to earn a living as a minimum-wage housecleaner.
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