Booklist (starred review) - Carol Haggas
"With great compassion and humility….Waldman shines a much-needed spotlight on the inequities of corporate retail policies and practices."
Atlantic - Jordan Kisner
"Help Wanted is a tragedy of circumstance.… As ever, Waldman is a sharp observer of the world, a writer whose attention to particulars only sharpens the big picture."
Telegraph (UK)
"Sharply observed…Waldman’s writing is richest and most humane as she traces each worker’s private ambitions."
Charles Bock
"Help Wanted is a marvelous novel. We get to eavesdrop and follow and enjoy the misadventures of the motley cast working the four in the morning shift (unloading trucks at a big box store, a place none of these workers can afford). On one level this is about economics and gentrification; on another level it is about people struggling to keep themselves from drowning; meanwhile there are hijinks so funny you blow your tea out of your nose; there’s a perfectly absurd plot straight out of Catch-22. We want everyone to get that lifesaving promotion. The worst thing about this novel is that I finished it and can’t ever read it again for the first time. But now it is part of my life. I am thankful to Adelle Waldman for being brave and talented and bighearted enough to have created this gift."
Max Liu
"Corporate hypocrisy and the futility of hard graft are skewered in this novel on working culture in a New York superstore.… [S]hows Waldman’s gift for subtle, devastating satire."
Bookreporter.com - Harvey Freedenberg
"Reflective, wry.… If The Office had been centered on the warehouse crew at Dunder Mifflin, but without playing its workers entirely for laughs, it might have looked something like Waldman’s book."
Hudson Review - Louise Marburg
"Adelle Waldman exposes the realities of low wage work in America in [this] tragicomic novel … If you’ve ever wondered what goes on behind the door marked 'employees only' at your local Target or Walmart, you’ll find out when you read Help Wanted."
National Book Review - James Graff
"Funny and brilliant.… Airing the real world of low-wage work, Waldman shows how its dysfunction and instability skews the livelihoods of her deftly captured characters—and millions of other all-but-invisible workers like them."
Economist
"Lively [and] humane."
Bookseller
"An immersive, deeply affecting human drama."
Richard Russo
"Help Wanted isn’t just smart and funny and wise. It’s also importantvital, reallyto our understanding of how and why the American dream is becoming increasingly inaccessible to working class Americans, even as that long-shot dream stubbornly refuses to die."
The New Yorker - Katy Waldman
"Waldman refreshes the social novel’s insistence on the necessity of seeing past the conventional or obvious to a more fine-grained yet elusive reality.… Help Wanted washes labor in a stately, almost Steinbeckian light, emphasizing its difficulty but also its dignity."
New York Times - Michelle Goldberg
"Poignant, funny, stealthily ambitious.…I doubt there are many authors who could write a literary critique of neoliberalism as breezy and almost sitcom-like as Help Wanted."
Gary Shteyngart
"I can’t think of a book more necessary. Adelle Waldman takes us into the universe of American labor with generosity and compassion. It has been a while since workers have been portrayed through the lens of a novelist with such insight and attention to the details of service industry life. Simply enthralling."
Elif Batuman
"Help Wanted is like a great nineteenth-century novel about now, at once an effervescent workplace comedy and a profoundly human exploration of the psychic toll exacted by the labor market. The characters are so richly drawn—so full, under all their defenses, of the desire to be loved—that even the annoying ones will win your heart. Adelle Waldman is a master."
Air Mail - Tom Socca
"Waldman observes her characters with the hilarious, remorseless precision real people use on real people.…Waldman’s briskly roving point of view captures the constant squeeze on everyone."
Time - Shannon Carlin
"A shrewd workplace comedy that never makes low-wage workers or the issues they face the punchline."
Alexandra Chang
"Adelle Waldman applies her sharp sense for relational drama and dark comedy to the retail work space.…Help Wanted is structured around the collective, depicting the toll of capitalism on low-wage workers."
New York Magazine - Emily Gould
"Like The Office in its universal workplace humor and even more like Mike White’s Enlightened in its textured portrayal of how small humiliations and injustices at work inevitably boil over into righteous rage, Help Wanted feels at once familiar yet revelatory in its specificity….[C]apture[s] a world and a moment in time in a way that…has more in common with the works of George Eliot and Jane Austen than most novels published today."
starred review Booklist
"With great compassion and humility.… Waldman shines a much-needed spotlight on the inequities of corporate retail policies and practices."
Daily Mail (UK)
"Tightly plotted, slyly caustic and often very funny, it’s hugely enjoyable."
Keith Gessen
"A serious moral inquiry into the lives of a group of people who work in a big-box store, Help Wanted is a novel about work, about the retail industry in the age of Amazon, and about the effects of late capitalism on human relations. It is also hard to put down."
Vogue - Taylor Antrim
"The events in Adelle Waldman's fleet-footed novel Help Wanted take place at a box store of declining fortunes in upstate New York—a setting that in Waldman's steady hands proves to be a crucible of ambition and survival."
Times (UK)
"A smart satire of skulduggery and drudgery."
People
"Could not be more fascinating or more fun."
People Magazine
"Life behind the scenes of big-box retail is plumbed with wit, wisdom, and humanity in this fresh workplace drama….Waldman’s depiction of the routines, backstories, and relationships among a group of wonderfully believable characters could not be more fascinating or more fun."
Michelle Orange
"What a gorgeous and ingenious and heartfelt work Help Wanted is!"
NPR - Maureen Corrigan
"Graced with the psychological acuity that distinguished its predecessor."
Guardian - Kevin Power
"Perhaps the most impressive thing about Help Wanted is that Waldman manages, in telling her small story, to describe not just the American economic prison but the global one. So: both a novel of manners and a systems novel, a book that shows us, perhaps, how intimately linked these apparently disparate genres were all along. It’s a funny novel, as well as deeply humane and very angry.… [I]t also reads, with a frightening lack of irony, as a message from America itself. Help wanted. The question is, who’s listening?"
Joshua Ferris
"In Help Wanted, the tragic heroes of the gig economy, full of dreams and sob stories and what-if scenarios, concoct a plot to better their lives. Yet even as frustrations mount and their plot goes sideways, hope never dies. Adelle Waldman delivers both a brilliant diagnosis and a moving account of retail workers hidden in plain sight all around us, whose full humanity has never been so richly displayed or touchingly rendered."
Wall Street Journal - Sam Sacks
"The dramatic irony instills this comic novel’s small-time escapades with a potent and lingering feeling of injustice."
Los Angeles Times - Bethanne Patrick
"Great workplace novels are few and far between…and great workplace novels that deal with social and economic class in our country are even rarer. However, Waldman adds a rare entry to the workplace canon with this wise, funny story of an upstate New York big-box store."
Christian Science Monitor - Heller McAlpin
"Sociologically astute, deeply humane, and cleverly plotted."
Kirkus Reviews
★ 2023-12-06
At a big-box retailer in upstate New York, a team of workers is energized by a secret plan.
“‘Roaches’ was what other employees called the people who worked Movement, because they descended on the store in the dark of night, then scattered in the morning, when the customers arrived.” Waldman’s long-awaited follow-up to The Love Affairs of Nathaniel P. (2013) is set in a totally different world—bye-bye, literary Brooklyn; hello, blue-collar Potterstown, a forlorn small town with a view of the Catskills, stuck in a downward spiral ever since the local IBM plant closed. What remains the same is the author’s emotional intelligence, wry humor, and sensitivity to matters of money and class. Meanwhile, the details of daily operation and workplace culture at Town Square Store #1512 are evoked in fine and fascinating detail. The members of Team Movement (formerly “Logistics”) are introduced in the org chart that opens the book, and that org chart is the heart of the plot. Currently the nine “roaches” are managed by a guy they call Little Will. Everybody loves Little Will, but his self-absorbed boss, Meredith, a Fashion Institute of Technology dropout, is a nightmare. Now the top dog, Big Will, whose “nonthreatening air of diversity, combined with his good looks and his youth,” make him a corporate dreamboat, is getting his hoped-for transfer to his home state of Connecticut. Does that mean the hated Meredith will get his job? But if so, would Little Will move up and leave a management slot free for one of the roaches, who get no benefits whatsoever? This situation inspires a smart lesbian mom named Val to cook up a plot in which each of her sympathetically imagined Movement compadres plays a role. Even the coffeepot in the break room during a team meeting is a character: “hissing and sputtering wildly, like a small animal trying to scare off a larger predator.”
The workplace dramedy of the year.