A review by jenklu
Rivethead: Tales from the Assembly Line by Ben Hamper

funny lighthearted fast-paced

4.0

A peek into the auto-making heartland of America as it was through the author's childhood up to the late 80's. Hamper has a great sense of humor and a knack for bringing you into his slice of life. It's a quick read, and mostly light-hearted thanks to Hamper's humor. I particularly enjoyed the long-running bit where he was pretending to narrate his riveting as if it were a competition with the Japanese auto workers, and he came out on top. Reading as someone who's spent my whole life hearing  about industrial Michigan as a hollowed-out wasteland, it was interesting to reconcile that with the vibrancy of Flint MI as described in the book.

There are some darker undercurrents to the book. There's a pervasive sense that these factory jobs, while providing a good living for the workers, cause deep mental trauma. Starting from Hamper's father, who couldn't hold down a job, to Hamper's  more light-hearted means to pass time as quickly on his shifts with drugs, alcohol, hijinks, etc., up until the factory-induced anxiety attacks that plague Hamper towards the end of the book. There's a message about the difficult monotony of industrial life. While Hamper view automation and robotics as the enemy in the book, there's some kind of message that maybe these kinds of jobs really are best left to the machines.