Amanda Freeman (The New Press) is her first book.Lisa Dodson. She lives in Portland, Oregon.
Praise for Getting Me Cheap: This empathetic and eye-opening study leaves a mark. -Publishers Weekly The stories shared in this volume speak for themselves, spotlighting the frustrations, needs, and hopes of the women featured. -Library Journal An insightful book that shines light on issues that should be better understood by any responsible citizen. -Kirkus Reviews An urgent expose and exploration of one of our most pressing social problems-hidden in plain sight. A must-read for anyone concerned about how to make America a more just and equal nation. -Saru Jayaraman, president of One Fair Wage and author of One Fair Wage This formidable book insists we face the harm of wage poverty in women's lives and see the real costs of relying on their cheap labor. The powerful stories of mothers' determination to care for their children become a courageous call for solidarity and collective action. -Ellen Bravo, activist and author of Standing Up: Tales of Struggle The lives that so many of us lead depend on the invisible labor of others, whose own needs are cast aside by our society. This brilliant book moves those essential workers-so many of them mothers-into the light -Michael Eric Dyson, New York Times bestselling author of Tears We Cannot Stop: A Sermon to White America The United States has the highest percentage of low-wage workers of any country in the OECD aside from Lithuania-a disproportionate number of them women who provide services to better-off families. Freeman and Dobson take us inside their lives to reveal the price they and their families pay for the cheap labor they provide to others. -Stephanie Coontz, author of The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap