EBOOK

Fulfillment

Winning and Losing in One-Click America

Alec MacGillis
(0)
Pages
400
Year
2021
Language
English

About

In 1937, the famed writer and activist Upton Sinclair published a novel bearing the subtitle A Story of Ford-America. He blasted the callousness of a company worth "a billion dollars" that underpaid its workers while forcing them to engage in repetitive and sometimes dangerous assembly line labor. Eighty-three years later, the market capitalization of Amazon.com has exceeded one trillion dollars, while the value of the Ford Motor Company hovers around thirty billion. We have, it seems, entered the age of one-click America-and as the coronavirus makes Americans more dependent on online shopping, its sway will only intensify.

Alec MacGillis's Fulfillment is not another inside account or exposé of our most conspicuously dominant company. Rather, it is a literary investigation of the America that falls within that company's growing shadow. As MacGillis shows, Amazon's sprawling network of delivery hubs, data centers, and corporate campuses epitomizes a land where winner and loser cities and regions are drifting steadily apart, the civic fabric is unraveling, and work has become increasingly rudimentary and isolated.

Ranging across the country, MacGillis tells the stories of those who've thrived and struggled to thrive in this rapidly changing environment. In Seattle, high-paid workers in new office towers displace a historic black neighborhood. In suburban Virginia, homeowners try to protect their neighborhood from the environmental impact of a new data center. Meanwhile, in El Paso, small office supply firms seek to weather Amazon's takeover of government procurement, and in Baltimore a warehouse supplants a fabled steel plant. Fulfillment also shows how Amazon has become a force in Washington, D.C., ushering readers through a revolving door for lobbyists and government contractors and into CEO Jeff Bezos's lavish Kalorama mansion.

With empathy and breadth, MacGillis demonstrates the hidden human costs of the other inequality-not the growing gap between rich and poor, but the gap between the country's winning and losing regions. The result is an intimate account of contemporary capitalism: its drive to innovate, its dark, pitiless magic, its remaking of America with every click.

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Reviews

"What [Fulfillment] reveals is a country that has been falling apart for quite some time, and a company that has been willing and able to turn a failure of public policy into private power . . . Each chapter of Fulfillment is a beautifully written and sometimes overwhelmingly detailed story . . . The book has something in common with classic works that exposed the plight of the poor to those bette
Sarah Leonard, The New Republic
"A grounded and expansive examination of the American economic divide . . . This is much more than a story of retail. It's about real estate. It's about lobbying, data centers and the CIA . . . It takes a skillful journalist to weave data and anecdotes together so effectively."
Carolyn Kellogg, Los Angeles Times
"In Alec MacGillis's urgent book, Fulfillment: Winning and Losing in One-Click America, true fulfillment is elusive in Amazon's America. Through interviews, careful investigative reporting and vignettes from across the country, MacGillis deftly unravels the strong grip Amazon has on the United States . . . [Through] deeply humanizing portraits of communities impacted by Amazon, MacGillis gives us
Xiaowei Wang, The New York Times Book Review

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