From the author of Managed Care, the Maxy Book Awards 2019 "Book of the Year"
Joe Barrett's Daisy in the Doghouse is serious about Americas social ills, yet it wraps its message in a dark, yet witty send-up of the digital age. IndieReader
What happens when an ex-CEO, frustrated with the corruption in the American financial system, hijacks his twelve-year-old daughters blog to try and change things from the bottom up?
In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, Jack Sullivan, former CEO and current stay-at-home dad, struggles to find an outlet for his frustrations with the unfair financial systems of corporate America. Meanwhile, Daisy, his precocious twelve-year-old daughter, has recently garnered a substantial following for her new blog, documenting surreptitious social experiments performed on her unaware family. When Daisys blogging activities are outed, Jack decides to leverage his daughters popularity with American youth to communicate the greed and hypocrisy inherent in the corporate professions of many parents. Inspired by her fathers rants, the popularity of Daisys blog soars, resulting in an unlikely sequence of events that ultimately has a very positive impact on way that people treat each other in American society.
Genre: Literary Fiction
Joe Barrett's Daisy in the Doghouse is serious about Americas social ills, yet it wraps its message in a dark, yet witty send-up of the digital age. IndieReader
What happens when an ex-CEO, frustrated with the corruption in the American financial system, hijacks his twelve-year-old daughters blog to try and change things from the bottom up?
In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, Jack Sullivan, former CEO and current stay-at-home dad, struggles to find an outlet for his frustrations with the unfair financial systems of corporate America. Meanwhile, Daisy, his precocious twelve-year-old daughter, has recently garnered a substantial following for her new blog, documenting surreptitious social experiments performed on her unaware family. When Daisys blogging activities are outed, Jack decides to leverage his daughters popularity with American youth to communicate the greed and hypocrisy inherent in the corporate professions of many parents. Inspired by her fathers rants, the popularity of Daisys blog soars, resulting in an unlikely sequence of events that ultimately has a very positive impact on way that people treat each other in American society.
Genre: Literary Fiction
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