Hack: How I Stopped Worrying About What to Do With My Life and Started Driving a Yellow Cab by Melissa Plaut

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(Hardcover - Bargain)

  • Pub. Date: August 2007
  • 224pp
  • Sales Rank: 11,046

    Reader Rating: (5 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Originality" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: August 2007
    • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 224pp
    • Sales Rank: 11,046

    Synopsis

    “I had always thought about driving a cab, just thought it’d be interesting and different, a good way to make money. But it always seemed like a fleeting whim, a funny idea, something I would never actually do.”

    In her late twenties and after a series of unsatisfying office jobs, Melissa Plaut decided she was going to stop worrying about what to do with the rest of her life and focus on what she was going to do next. Her first adventure: becoming a taxi driver. Undeterred by the fact that 99 percent of cabbies in the city were men, she went to taxi school, got her hack license, and hit the streets of Manhattan and the outlying boroughs.

    Hack traces Plaut’s first two years behind the wheel of a yellow cab traveling the 6,400 miles of New York City streets. She shares the highs, the lows, the shortcuts, and professional trade secrets. Between figuring out where and when to take a bathroom break and trying to avoid run-ins with the NYPD, Plaut became an honorary member of a diverse brotherhood that included Harvey, the cross-dressing cabbie; the dispatcher affectionately called “Paul the crazy Romanian”; and Lenny, the garage owner rumored to be the real-life prototype for TV’s Louie De Palma of Taxi.

    With wicked wit and arresting insight, Melissa Plaut reveals the crazy parade of humanity that passed through her cab–including struggling actors, federal judges, bartenders, strippers, and drug dealers–while showing how this grueling work provided her with empowerment and a greater sense of self. Hack introduces an irresistible new voice that is much like New York itself–vivid, profane, lyrical, andineffably hip

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    Biography

    Melissa Plaut was born in 1975 and grew up in the suburbs of New York City. After college, she held a series of office jobs until, at the age of twenty-nine, she began driving a yellow cab. A year later she started writing “New York Hack” (newyorkhack.blogspot.com), a blog about her experiences behind the wheel. Within a few months, the blog was receiving several thousand hits a day. Melissa Plaut lives in Brooklyn.

    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 5Reviews: 2

    Refreshing Memoirby Cisley

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    August 19, 2009: I found this book to be very interesting. Now tell me, how many memoirs have you read about female taxi cab drivers in New York? Exactly. Well worth the money and thoroughly enjoyable. A refreshing change from the memoirs of those involved in alcohol and drug abuse...

    I Also Recommend: The Gerbil Farmer's Daughter, Wesley the Owl, The Daily Coyote.

    Awesome book! Quick read, but will change what you think of taxis forever!by Anonymous

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    February 27, 2008: Melissa Plaut's work starts out at full speed and accelerates nonstop into the anecdotes and crazy stories that color the life of a NYC cab driver. But this isn't just a collection of cab stories: it's also the author's quest to discover in her late 20's what to do with the rest of her life. What is most refreshing is that she accepts the hardships of her chosen trade and acknowledges that, given her education and upbringing, she had many opportunities most cabbies do not. This story will definetly change your perceptions of the taxi business. It exposes the petty and major indignities suffered by cab drivers on a daily basis, which range from drunken disorderly customers, out-of-control cops, and the nettlesome bureaucracy that is the Taxi and Limosuine Commission. Not that the job doesn't have its benefits: the occasional affable customer, generous tipper, or happy insight. I haven't thought the same about a taxicab since reading it -- and I'm much more grateful for every cab ride I receive now. Weather your interest is in the taxi industry, or you simply need grab-the-bull-by-its-horns inspiration for what to do with your life, this book is a fantastic read.