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Tower Dog

Life Inside the Deadliest Job in America

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
INSIDE THE DEADLIEST JOB IN AMERICA: Meet the cell tower workers who risk their lives—and lose them at an alarmingly high rate—in the name of connectivity.
Recent TV shows would have you believe that the most dangerous job in America is a crab fisherman, or maybe even an ice road trucker. But what U.S. Department of Labor unequivocally recognizes as the most dangerous job in America belongs to the tower dog, the men and women who work on cell towers across the country, building the networks that keep us all connected.
In Tower Dog, Douglas Scott Delaney, a tower dog for more than 15 years, draws readers into this dark and high-stakes world that most don't even know exists, yet rely on every minute of every day. This risk-laden profession has been covered by NBC Dateline, Frontline, The Wall Street Journal, and The Washington Post, but none of these reports have provided the real, inside story of these men and women who have always lived on the edge of society; a fascinating mix of construction crews and thrill-seekers. Delaney is a brash and illuminating guide, and Tower Dog gives us the real experience of what it's like for the workers balanced precariously above the clouds.
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    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2017
      A memoir from a young "fourteen-dollar-an-hour cog in a thankless deadly wheel."For some people in this world, their routines involve drinking beer in lawn chairs set up in the parking lots of small-town hotels, then getting up to climb hundreds of feet into the air to construct and maintain the cellphone networks that the rest of us depend on. It's dangerous work--the most dangerous job in the world, by the measure on which this narrative hinges, and one that has already taken the lives of many of the people portrayed here. In 1997, sometime screenwriter and playwright Delaney exchanged the ivory for the steel tower and made his first "tower dog" ascent into the sky over Kansas in freezing weather. "This would not be so bad," he writes, instantly adding, "But for the next 200 feet and the next eleven hours it was very, very bad." His fellow climbers are philosophical, if stoically resigned to the pain, discomfort, and danger of their work. They are also masterful technicians, and if nothing else, readers will learn what 4G means and how cellphone towers work. Throughout, the author plays a few writerly tricks, including protesting his writerly status ("I never called myself a writer. I never introduced myself as a writer and I was always uncomfortable when I was introduced as a writer"), but these are minor annoyances in a readable book whose larger import is in depicting a world that very few people would want to explore firsthand, somewhere between the blue-collar and the high-wire. Delaney is unfussy and workmanlike, and if he never attains the philosophical depth of, say, Matthew Crawford's Shop Class as Soulcraft (2009), he delivers a persuasive, whole-sighted view of a highly specialized pursuit. A vivid book guaranteed to make readers more aware of what it takes to get that cellphone signal into his or her hand, for better or worse.

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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