"Meticulous . . . Nagle's] passion for the subject really comes
to life." --"The New York Times
"New York City produces more than twelve thousand tons of household
trash and recyclables a day. As quickly as it accumulates, it's
hauled away. But who makes that happen? What's life like for the
workers with careers built around garbage?
In "Picking Up," the anthropologist Robin Nagle takes us inside
New York City's Department of Sanitation, a largely unseen and
often unloved army responsible for keeping the city alive. Nagle
spent a decade with sanitation people of all ranks to learn what it
takes to manage Gotham's garbage. She even took the job herself,
driving trucks and plowing snow while enduring the physical aches,
public abuse, and risk of injury that are constant realities of the
job. Nagle offers an insider's perspective on the complex
hierarchies, intricate rules, and obscure language unique to this
mostly invisible world.
Not just a contemporary account, "Picking Up" charts New York
City's four-hundred-year struggle with trash. It traces the city's
waste-management efforts from a time when filth overwhelmed the
streets to today's far more vigorous practices, which have made the
city cleaner than it's been in decades.
Complete with vividly evoked characters and memorable descriptions
of the sights and smells of the job, "Picking Up" reveals the vital
role sanitation workers play in every city across the globe.
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