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Unclean Jobs for Women and Girls: Stories
Unclean Jobs for Women and Girls: Stories
Unclean Jobs for Women and Girls: Stories
Audiobook4 hours

Unclean Jobs for Women and Girls: Stories

Written by Alissa Nutting

Narrated by Brittany Pressley

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

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About this audiobook

In this darkly comic and surreal collection from celebrated author Alissa Nutting, misfit women scramble for agency in a series of uncanny circumstances.

Throughout these breathtakingly creative seventeen stories spread across time, space, and differing planes of reality, we encounter a host of women and girls in a wide range of unusual jobs. A space cargo deliverywoman enlists the help of her cybersex partner to release her mother from cryogenic prison.  Desperate for affection and a more lavish lifestyle, a young woman falls under the corrosive spell of the fashion model for whom she’s given up everything to assist. A woman submits to a procedure that will turn her body into a futuristic ant farm, only to discover the sinister plans of her doctor.

Though the settings these women find themselves in are as shocking and unique as they come, the emotional battles they face are searing and real. Some are trying to fight their way out of the cycle of abuse, while others must cope with the anguish brought on by infertility or the aftershocks of an abortion. Still others confront and embrace their most depraved desires, carving out power for themselves in worlds that relentlessly ask for conformity.

Wickedly funny yet ringing with deep truths about gender, authority and the ways we inhabit and restrict the female body, Unclean Jobs for Women and Girls is a brilliant commentary on the kaleidoscope of human behavior and a remarkably nuanced satire for our times.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperAudio
Release dateJul 3, 2018
ISBN9780062858344
Unclean Jobs for Women and Girls: Stories
Author

Alissa Nutting

Alissa Nutting is an assistant professor of English at Grinnell College. She is the author of the story collection Unclean Jobs for Women and Girls, as well as the novel Tampa.

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Reviews for Unclean Jobs for Women and Girls

Rating: 3.856321798850574 out of 5 stars
4/5

87 ratings7 reviews

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Great! Very Nice! Thanks for sharing this information with us.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Some people in Hell are nice. They just happened to have done a very reprehensible thing at one point. I killed my husband once, for instance. But I felt bad enough about it to also kill myself.This is a collection of both weird and weirdly heartfelt short stories. A woman arrives in Hell and ends up in a relationship with the devil. A grandmother sends her granddaughter into the heating vent to confront the ghost of her dead mother. A woman who works piloting cargo ships from planet to planet buys her cryogenically frozen mother when the prison she was held in closes. A mortician smokes the hair of the deceased to gain insight into their lives. But when I'm around children it seems like I will someday be able to accept my own death. I observe their natural purity, the joy they derive from grass, trees, and human company, and I realize that these things would never make me joyful....I also like the park because kids are easy to watch: they're fast and loud and they never stop moving. Watching kids play is like staring at an aquarium set to "boil."The longer stories in this collection, where Nutting took the time to allow her characters to fully inhabit their odd circumstances, were the strongest in this book. The shorter ones felt undeveloped.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Pleased to read that the trans-misogynistic chapter title in this collection was changed in a more recent edition.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I was pleased that the first story in this collection might have been the best short story I've ever read. Little did I know that it was going to prove to be the second- or third-best story in the book. At its best, the stories feature enormously inventive premises--a woman goes to Hell and grows acid-spewing breasts for self-defense, six people boiling in a pot exchange views on what it's like to be eaten--and about half of the book consists of these masterpieces. The other half of the stories are usually quirky narratives of the life of today's youth and feature a good deal of venery and drunkenness. These stories are never less than good, but I liked them less. As for outright flaws, the only one worth mentioning is the author's penchant for homonym errors; give her a chance to choose the wrong one, and she'll choose it. Notwithstanding, this is nothing less than a must-read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I was completely drawn to the fantastic cover art and title - and was not disappointed. Truly fantastic writing.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Short stories are a hard sell with me, but this one was effortless. These stories were provoking without being demanding, dark without being heavy, offering questions without suggesting judgments, staying fun while being thinky.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I won't deny that my reading tastes have evolved over the last two years, particularly when it comes to strange or unusual texts. So it wasn't that far out of the ordinary for me to want to read Unclean Jobs for Women and Girls when I saw it was being offered by the publisher for review. Now, I've read some strange stuff through my two years as a Literature major but I have to say, this one really pushes the boundaries. Let me explain.First, the writing and storytelling are utterly brilliant. Crisp, clean, unusual stories from just a few pages long to a dozen or more. But each story is "meaty," as in it gives the reader something to think of, an insight to dwell on. One of the stories that really made me think centered around a cryogenic frozen mother who is purchased by her daughter. I was on the edge throughout the story, wanting to find out what was going to happen and happily/anxiously following the twists and turns of the story until its completion. But that was just one of many stories that had me feeling that way.Mostly, the advice I would give to those wanting to pick up this strange, wonderful collection of short stories is not to be sucked in by what could be classified as the "shock aspect." I think what made these stories really speak to me was delving deeper, setting aside that shock factor to understand what it was trying to get across. It was used as a tool, a way for me to see life in a way that was unfamiliar and strange and, as a result, the most ordinary, mundane emotions that I deal with on a day to day emotions were bright and new. And that is good writing, folks.