Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker: On Work and the Writing Life

Author:   Lori Jakiela
Publisher:   Bottom Dog Press
ISBN:  

9781947504004


Pages:   216
Publication Date:   23 July 2017
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker: On Work and the Writing Life


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Overview

In the Harmony Memoir Series, Lori Jakiela's fourth book. A Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker: On Work and the Writing Life ""I could throw a rock in just about any direction and hit a good writer. The hard part is finding the special ones, the writers who make us laugh, then cry and who make us feel like they're in our heads. Lori Jakiela is one of the special ones, and with Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker, she reminds us why, essay by essay, sentence by sentence. She writes from the heart, she's fearless and funny, and her love for her family and her craft leap off the page."" -- Ben Tanzer, author of Be Cool, SEX AND DEATH and Orphans

Full Product Details

Author:   Lori Jakiela
Publisher:   Bottom Dog Press
Imprint:   Bottom Dog Press
Dimensions:   Width: 12.70cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 17.80cm
Weight:   0.209kg
ISBN:  

9781947504004


ISBN 10:   1947504002
Pages:   216
Publication Date:   23 July 2017
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Lori Jakiela's Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker is a hilarious, working-class hero of an essay collection. It's full of mall employees, flight attendants, working mothers, struggling writers, loving daughters, and adopted children, who all end up being one person named Lori Jakiela. A book of many masks, it proves the saying: there is no such thing as an ordinary life.-- Scott McClanahan, author of Crapalachia and The Sarah Book, On Belief is its own Kind of Truth, Maybe: The story of what we all long for...filled with heart-wrenching scenes and moments of transcendence. It doesn't look away from the ugly, but it always finds the light that rises above it. Lee Martin Lori Jakiela's Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker is a hilarious, working-class hero of an essay collection. It's full of mall employees, flight attendants, working mothers, struggling writers, loving daughters, and adopted children, who all end up being one person named Lori Jakiela. A book of many masks, it proves the saying: there is no such thing as an ordinary life Scott McClanahan, author of Crapalachia and The Sarah Book... Lori Jakiela's Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker is every bit as lively as its title. Jakiela's wide-ranging dispatches from the land of polka, sex chairs, nut-rolls and fish frys are truly unforgettable. It is said that we see the world we are looking for - Jakiela sees human kindness and human folly in equal measure, and describes all of it vividly, poignantly, and with a brilliant sense of humor. Dinty W. Moore, author of Between Panic & Desir Lori Jakiela�s Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker is a hilarious, working-class hero of an essay collection. It�s full of mall employees, flight attendants, working mothers, struggling writers, loving daughters, and adopted children, who all end up being one person named Lori Jakiela. A book of many masks, it proves the saying: there is no such thing as an ordinary life Scott McClanahan, author of Crapalachia and The Sarah Book... Lori Jakiela�s Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker is every bit as lively as its title. Jakiela�s wide-ranging dispatches from the land of polka, sex chairs, nut-rolls and fish frys are truly unforgettable. It is said that we see the world we are looking for � Jakiela sees human kindness and human folly in equal measure, and describes all of it vividly, poignantly, and with a brilliant sense of humor. Dinty W. Moore, author of Between Panic & Desir I could throw a rock in just about any direction and hit a good writer. The hard part is finding the special ones, the writers who make us laugh, then cry and who make us feel like they're in our heads. Lori Jakiela is one of the special ones, and with Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker, she reminds us why, essay by essay, sentence by sentence. She writes from the heart, she's fearless and funny, and her love for her family and her craft leap off the page. -- Ben Tanzer, author of Be Cool, SEX AND DEATH and Orphans


On Belief is its own Kind of Truth, Maybe: The story of what we all long for...filled with heart-wrenching scenes and moments of transcendence. It doesn't look away from the ugly, but it always finds the light that rises above it. Lee Martin Lori Jakiela s Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker is a hilarious, working-class hero of an essay collection. It s full of mall employees, flight attendants, working mothers, struggling writers, loving daughters, and adopted children, who all end up being one person named Lori Jakiela. A book of many masks, it proves the saying: there is no such thing as an ordinary life Scott McClanahan, author of Crapalachia and The Sarah Book... Lori Jakiela s Portrait of the Artist as a Bingo Worker is every bit as lively as its title. Jakiela s wide-ranging dispatches from the land of polka, sex chairs, nut-rolls and fish frys are truly unforgettable. It is said that we see the world we are looking for Jakiela sees human kindness and human folly in equal measure, and describes all of it vividly, poignantly, and with a brilliant sense of humor. Dinty W. Moore, author of Between Panic & Desir


Author Information

Lori Jakiela is the adopted only child of a millwright and a nurse who believed work was work only if it showed in your hands. Jakiela�s father and mother have been dead many years, yet she goes on writing them the way writers do when they don�t say everything that needed saying in this life. She�s been a bingo worker, a waitress, a journalist, a bartender, a sportswriter, a secretary, a Things Remembered key maker, a flight attendant, more. Raised in Trafford, Pennsylvania, Jakiela left New York in 2000. Now she teaches writing at a university. She lives with her husband, the author Dave Newman, and their two children in the house she grew up in. The author of three previous memoirs The Bridge to Take When Things Get Serious, Miss New York Has Everything, and the award willing Belief Is Its Own Kind of Truth, Maybe, as well as the poetry collection Spot the Terrorist. Jakiela writes �to figure things out, to connect the dots between all that beautiful strangeness.�

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