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Reviews for Spy on the Bus: Memoir of a Company Rat

 Spy on the Bus magazine reviews

The average rating for Spy on the Bus: Memoir of a Company Rat based on 2 reviews is 2 stars.has a rating of 2 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2016-10-20 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 1 stars Michael P Napier
Blah! I couldn't finish this book in its entirety. Written from actual letters that she mailed home, it tells the true story of a young woman hired to spy on bus drivers and report on their driving skills, whether they pocketed fares, etc. Since it is told entirely through letters, it comes across as boring, after about 50 pages. This would have worked much better in a short story/short biography format.
Review # 2 was written on 2008-09-03 00:00:00
2008was given a rating of 3 stars Matthew Laramore
I came across this book in the special advertising pages in The New York Review of Books for independent press publications, and wrangled a swap with the publisher for one of my own books. It probably wasn't worth it, because I never did finish this book. I gave it three stars anyway because it is, in its peculiar way, and, almost despite itself, occasionally very interesting. Margean Gladysz worked as a company spy on various bus lines back in the 1940s. In those days, passengers could flag the bus down on the road and paid the driver the fare. Obviously, the driver could (and often did) pocket the money himself, since there was no way to prove he didn't... unless someone reported him. Hence the bus spy, a regular job in those days. In the forties, there was no Interstate system, and, in the Midwest, where all this takes place, the roads might not even be paved. The letters that Gladysz wrote to her mother and father, one every day, since phone calls were too expensive, details the traveler's life: what her hotel rooms were like, what she ate in the diners and other eateries and what she paid for it; and what she saw out the bus windows. Unfortunately, there is far, far too much company gossip and a bit too much patting oneself on the back... all perfectly fine in a letter, but not in a book. Still, for anyone wanting a unique taste of Americana, this book can hardly be beat. And you'll weep when you read all the good stuff she ate, and for pocket change. No fast food then.


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