In a Day's Work : The Fight to End Sexual Violence Against America's Most Vulnerable Workers - Bernice Yeung

In a Day's Work

The Fight to End Sexual Violence Against America's Most Vulnerable Workers

By: Bernice Yeung

eBook | 5 May 2020

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Material:

Paperback edition will include a new preface by the author that contextualizes the book since the emergence of #MeToo and #TimesUp

Media track record:

  • HC edition garnered widespread attention and glowing reviews, including from including from the New York Review of Books, Washington Post, Bookforum, and Kirkus (starred review).
  • FastCompany's "The 10 best books for battling your sexist workplace"
  • BuzzFeed Books "8 New Books We Think You'll Love"
  • "BITCHREADS: 15 Books Feminists Should Read in March"

Platform:

  • Author's platform recently grew as news spread of the book being a Pulitzer finalist
  • Works for ProPublica, which has 740k twitter followers and regular promotes their employees' books

Endorsements:

  • "In a Day's Work is exactly what I've been waiting for—some serious attention to the great majority of sexual harassment victims, who aren't Hollywood stars but the low-paid women whom we depend on to pick farm produce, clean offices, and care for our children. Bernice Yeung's scalding expose should dramatically affect the way we see women's abuse in the workplace."
    —Barbara Ehrenreich, author of Nickel and Dimed
  • "This is a powerful work of investigative journalism that lifts the curtain on stories that have been hidden for too long."
    —BuzzFeed
  • "In a Day's Work shows us how to stamp out sexual violence: We don't have to reinvent the wheel; these women have been leading the way. All it takes is to join them."
    —Bookforum
  • "It can seem like an uphill battle to bring attention to the working-class victims of harassment, even though these women are often abused in starker and more brutal fashion than their counterparts in Hollywood...Yeung has helped correct this imbalance."
    —New York Review of Books
Industry Reviews

Praise for In a Day’s Work:
2019 Pulitzer Prize Finalist in General Nonfiction

Winner of the PEN/John Kenneth Galbraith Award

Winner of the Goddard Riverside Stephan Russo Book Prize for Social Justice


One of BuzzFeed’s “21 Amazing New Books You Need to Read This Spring”

In a Day’s Work is a . . . much-needed addition to the literature on sexual harassment in the U.S. . . . [B]uilding a cross-class movement as Yeung shows, will mean learning to stop unseeing the working women around us.”
The New York Review of Books

“[Yeung] tells compelling stories that illustrate systemic problems without reducing people to mere players in a legal argument. She skillfully knits case studies into rigorous policy analysis. Most important, Yeung traces paths toward progress beyond merely raising awareness.”
The Washington Post

“As pundits opine about #MeToo in the pages of every major newspaper, Yeung does something better: Rather than giver her own view on how to solve the scourge of sexual violence, she shows us what these workers themselves have been doing to address it. . . In a Day’s Work shows us how to stamp out sexual violence: We don’t have to reinvent the wheel; these women have been leading the way. All it takes is to join them.”
Bookforum

“The author mitigates the difficult material by bringing humanity, empathy, and hope to each page. . . . The book concludes with guardedly hopeful descriptions of workplace training programs, government regulation, and union advocacy. Even more moving, however, is the sense of a reporter deeply committed to her sources and her material .”
Publisher Weekly

“A timely, intensely intimate, and relevant exposé on a greatly disregarded sector of the American workforce.”
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

In a Day’s Work is exactly what I’ve been waiting for—some serious attention to the great majority of sexual harassment victims, who aren’t Hollywood stars but the low-paid women whom we depend on to pick farm produce, clean offices, and care for our children. Bernice Yeung’s scalding exposé should dramatically affect the way we see women’s abuse in the workplace.”
Barbara Ehrenreich, author of Nickel and Dimed

In a Day’s Work is a must-read for all who believe time’s up on abusive employment practices for all workers. Yeung shows us through these courageous stories that the time to change the balance of power is now.”
Saru Jayaraman, author of Behind the Kitchen Door

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