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A review by savvylit
Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands by Kate Beaton
dark
emotional
reflective
medium-paced
5.0
Ducks is an incredibly compelling memoir that catalogs the reality of the working experience in several corporate cities. Beaton unflinchingly portrays the humanity of the laborers in contrast to the inhumanity of the oil mega corps. The impetus behind Beaton's decision to move to the oil sands was financial: she had a significant amount of student loan debt from undergrad and wanted to pay it off as soon as possible. Ultimately, paying off her loans became a sort of figurative prison sentence for Beaton. From day one of her two-year work experience, she faced rampant and harmful misogyny. As she was forced to grow accustomed to her own personal danger, she also began to see the other dangers that were all too common at the camps: environmental devastation, mental health crises, and anti-indigenous decision-making.
Overall, I would highly recommend this memoir to anyone interested in immersing themselves in a unique labor story. Throughout Ducks, Beaton sticks to simply recounting her personal experiences, never explicitly making political statements. However, after experiencing secondhand the dehumanizing lifestyles required by Canada's oil companies, one can't help but come away from Ducks with at least some anti-capitalist sentiment.
Overall, I would highly recommend this memoir to anyone interested in immersing themselves in a unique labor story. Throughout Ducks, Beaton sticks to simply recounting her personal experiences, never explicitly making political statements. However, after experiencing secondhand the dehumanizing lifestyles required by Canada's oil companies, one can't help but come away from Ducks with at least some anti-capitalist sentiment.
Graphic: Death, Drug abuse, Infidelity, Misogyny, Sexual assault, Sexual violence, Suicidal thoughts, Car accident, and Sexual harassment
Moderate: Mental illness