Product Details
Big wheel at the cracker factory

Big wheel at the cracker factory
By Mickey Hess

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


1 new or used available from $8.50

Average customer review:

Product Description

Big Wheel at the Cracker Factory is about choosing what you want to be when you grow up, and finding out you still have to wait tables on the weekends. The book follows one year in the life of an adjunct instructor who takes on side jobs as an ice cream man, stand-up comedian, haunted house character, and Billy Graham Crusader.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #4610423 in Books
  • Published on: 2003
  • Binding: Unknown Binding
  • 185 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"It's a light-hearted look dealing with that period in life when you have to go from being a reckless youth to an adult, without sacrificing anything. That's hard to do and for some people it just paralyzes them." -- James Furbush, The Sly Oyster

Big Wheel at the Cracker Factory is an absolute winner, exploring the difficulties and trials of finding a job, facing a lifetime of work, and searching for meaning somewhere within that work. Mickey Hess writes with truthful insights and rip-roaring hilarity. The fact that it is non-fiction only makes the book that much more important and engaging. -- Joe Meno, author of Hairstyles of the Damned

Like White Noise, without the angst or postmodernism. -- Al Burian, author of Burn Collector

Mickey Hess has taken his experiences as a struggling writing instructor and made them into a wry, picaresque novel. Thoroughly humorous. -- Cleveland Plain-Dealer

Mickey Hess makes you want to move to Kentucky and hang out and write poetry for the rest of your life. -- David Amram, author of Offbeat: Collaborating with Kerouac

Underground publishing advocate Mickey Hess uses deadpan humor and pungent observations to describe the price he pays for pursuing a passion -- teach college students how to write. -- Chicago Reader, which awarded Big Wheel "Critics Choice"

From the Back Cover
When Mickey Hess discovers that he can list his experience as a college instructor on an application to work as an ice cream man -- and still get the job -- he starts to wonder if being a professor has lost its prestige. With college enrollment and tuition costs at record highs, universities are staffing their courses with part-time instructors who commute between different schools to make a living. Big Wheel follows one year in the life of an adjunct instructor who takes on side jobs as an ice cream man, stand-up comedian, haunted house character, and Billy Graham Crusader. The jobs begin out of financial necessity, but become more of a diversion from a teaching career that Hess fears he is starting to take far more seriously than this employers are taking him.

About the Author
Mickey Hess taught part-time for several universities in Kentucky and Indiana before moving to his current position as Assistant Professor of English at Rider University. His books include Icons of Hip Hop, and Is Hip Hop Dead? His writing has appeared in Ninth Letter, Punk Planet, and Created in Darkness by Troubled Americans: The Best of McSweeney's, Humor Category. He lives in Philadelphia.


Customer Reviews

Funny and Insightful5
Technically a memoir, but also a look at jobs, decisions, dreams, influences and how to find meaning. The period this book covers is approximately 2000-2002, where Mickey finds himself in his post-college days with part-time teaching jobs, but also random gigs as an ice cream truck driver, stand-up comedian, and arcade attendant. He pokes fun at the colleges he works at, just as he does the "ridiculous" jobs. He is caught between a job he almost seems afraid to care about and those that amuse him. For our generation, and I am going to assume Mickey and I are almost exactly the same age, work has a different place in our lives. We know that bad things happen to good employees and that most people change jobs (and careers) repeatedly these days. We've watched jobs shipped overseas, fear layoffs, and seen how corporations have kept the minimum wage ridiculously low. We are a generation of cynics, but what happens when cynics find jobs with meaning? What happens when you find that you can't keep up the façade of youth and irresponsibility forever? The book is insightful, but also funny as hell. The scene where they are housesitting and a friend breaks the toilet tank in the middle of the night made me laugh out loud. Mickey has great comedic timing with a deadpan delivery. Highly recommended.

An entertaining, thought-provoking read5
Ever wonder what an adjunct professor does when he's not teaching? If so--and c'mon, you know you do--look no further than Mickey Hess's memoir "Big Wheel at the Cracker Factory." Reading about Hess moonlighting as an ice cream man, carnival ride operator, haunted house participant, and many others, is great fun, but poignant too, insofar as his side jobs lead him to question his life, occupation, relationships, and the motivations behind each. Overall, this one's a winner for sure.

How do you spell uncomfprtable?5
This book is a wishlist. This book is all about the secret dreams we have. This book is anathema to books like "nickel and dimed". This is a book where you can screw over your desperate lower middle class bosses, who cream to browbeat you.