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Mailman: My Wild Ride Delivering the Mail in Appalachia and Finally Finding Home

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An exuberant, hilarious, and profound memoir by a mailman in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, who found that working for the post office saved his life, taught him who he was, gave him purpose, and educated him deeply about a country he loves but had lost touch with.

Steve Grant was laid off in March of 2020. He was fifty and had cancer, so he needed health insurance, fast. Which is how he found himself a rural letter carrier in Appalachia, back in his old hometown.

Suddenly, he was the guy with the goods, delivering dog food and respirators and lube and heirloom tomato seeds and Lord of the Rings replica swords. He transported chicken feed to grandmothers living alone in the mountains and forded a creek with a refrigerator on his back. But while he carried the mail, he also carried a whole lot more than just the mail, including a family legacy of rage and the anxiety of having lost his identity along with his corporate job.

And yet, slowly, surrounded by a ragtag but devoted band of letter carriers, working this different kind of job, Grant found himself becoming a different kind of person. He became a lifeline for lonely people, providing fleeting moments of human contact and the assurance that our government still cares. He embraced the thrill of tackling new challenges, the pride of contributing to something greater than himself, the joy of camaraderie, and the purpose found in working hard for his family and doing a small, good thing for his community. He even kindled a newfound faith.

A brash and loving portrait of an all-American institution, Mailman offers a deeply felt portrait of both rural America and the dedicated (and eccentric) letter carriers who keep our lives running smoothly day to day. One hell of a raconteur, Steve Grant has written an irreverent, heartfelt, and often hilarious tribute to the simple heroism of daily service, the dignity and struggle of blue-collar work, the challenge and pleasure of coming home again after twenty-five years away, and the delight of going the extra mile for your neighbors, every day.

304 pages, Hardcover

First published July 8, 2025

724 people are currently reading
19992 people want to read

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Stephen Starring Grant

2 books30 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 276 reviews
Profile Image for Brady Lockerby.
221 reviews109k followers
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August 5, 2025
Absolutely loved this memoir! We follow Steve’s story of getting let go from his corporate America job right at the peak of Covid, moving back to his hometown of Blacksburg, Virginia, and in need of health care, takes a job as a rural mailman with the USPS. Our mail and packages don’t just “magically” show up at our homes, I think it’s something we all take advantage of and this recounts the real, raw, and intense job of what it’s like out there delivering the mail. Laugh out loud funny, informative, thought-provoking.. all of the things I love in a non-fiction.
Profile Image for Beth LaPlante.
1 review
July 12, 2025
I never leave reviews so this is a first. I am a rural carrier for USPS going on 17+ years now. I’ve been having a hard time the last couple of months dealing with workplace stress and culture. Not every office is as kind as the one Stephen was blessed to work at.

Today, I set out on my rural route and I listened to this book in audio format. I cringed at the things Stephen did during his year of pandemic delivery but you know, he got the job done and kept his kids entertained. Newbies may not always read our rural contract and know all the ins and outs and the proper way to handle things when management tells us to do things but no one can say Stephen was not a dedicated carrier.

While out delivering mail today during Amazon Prime week, I was brought back to the days of the pandemic.. my route felt very much like that again today. So I laughed, I cried, I swore… and I felt pride again for this job and what it has provided for myself and my family. Thank you Stephen for reminding me why I do this!
Profile Image for Diane Barnes.
1,577 reviews446 followers
September 5, 2025
This was not the book I thought it was, it was better. I thought I'd be getting some humorous anecdotes about the people on his route. I did get some of that, but also got much more. I learned the history of the USPS, its current state, what mail carriers endure on a daily basis, how much labor goes into sorting and delivering mail, how physically and mentally challenging it is. Throw in the pandemic and Amazon and politics and co-workers and you get a fascinating memoir.

Grant lost his well paid corporate job in early 2020, just as the world started to shut down because of Covid. He had prostate cancer and desperately needed health insurance for himself and his family. He was hired at the postal service, underwent a 2 week training course, took an oath of office similar to the presidential oath, and became a substitute route carrier. He assumed he might be working a couple of days a week, but that quickly became 7 days a week. Like most of his co-workers in Blacksburg, VA, he took his job seriously and did his best under very trying circumstances.

This memoir left me with a much different opinion of a job that I never gave much thought to before. Our mail carriers deserve "thank you for your service" every bit as much as our military members. When I think of what it takes to get my mail and packages to me on a daily basis, I'll never complain again.
Profile Image for Moonkiszt.
2,920 reviews335 followers
March 31, 2025
Stephen Starring Grant's Mailman: My Wild Ride Delivering the Mail in Appalachia and Finally Find Home is a hit for me - one of the funniest and most endearing books I've read this year!

He covers all the real life stuff: work life while aging, involuntary career change, the pandemic, family needs that continue no matter what you got going on, medical adventures, whether weather is too (adjective here), tools-aplenty, car love, You've Got Mail, USPS inside and out, to-gun-or-not-to-gun, co-workers - crazy v kind (kindness wins!), mind your pancakes, Being Prepared, losing loved ones, service to others and second chances.

This is a story that we all have experienced some part of - even if we've never worked for the USPS - but every single one of us have been served by the USPS, every single day of our lives. Stephen Grant hit a homerun (and I'm not sporty so very rarely use this phrase as it was my Dad's favorite - he was sporty) with this book.

5 stamped (proper postage applied) stars, having thoroughly enjoyed every mile of this wild ride. My Uncle H was a USPS carrier in Montclair CA from the 50's to the 80's - he's delivering heavenly mail now - we both throw out a resounding YES to this as a movie.

*A sincere thank you to Stephen Starring Grant, Simon & Schuster, and NetGalley for an ARC to read and review independently.* 25|52:3b
Profile Image for Audrey.
763 reviews55 followers
July 23, 2025
JD Vance WISHES he could've written this heartwarming memoir about growing up in Appalachia, loving your country, achieving upward mobility, and retaining your heart for service. I laughed and cried and couldn't go fifteen minutes through this audiobook without texting another friend to recommend it.
This book has a lot of heart and opinions and while not every reader will agree with every one of Grant's shared stances, his humanity just shines through the pages and made me feel so connected to our collective struggles and hopes. I just loved everything about it so much. Great gift to buy (and/or mail to) your loved ones.
Now if you'll excuse me, I need to go buy Frost Glacier Cherry Gatorade and a cooler for my mailman.
Profile Image for Stephanie Carlson.
318 reviews18 followers
March 19, 2025
**My thanks to Simon & Schuster for providing me with an advanced review copy via NetGalley**

4.5 stars

Stephen Starring Grant is a natural storyteller, with an easygoing, witty, but not overly performative authorial voice. In this memoir he tells the story of his year as a rural mail carrier with the USPS, but additionally manages to impart his observations of human behavior over the course of the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic, his views on the importance of community and a visibly involved government, and the importance of a federal postal service in today’s world.

I am a big fan of the USPS, and I loved learning tidbits of its history, structure, and funding while also following Grant’s personal story of carrying the mail around Blacksburg, Virginia. I also appreciated Grant’s reflections on his own life and career path, re-evaluating his life and choices now that he’s carrying the mail in his hometown after years of successful corporate advertising jobs. Grant doesn’t pretend to be some guru or life coach, but his self-reflection and tentative hypotheses on human social and professional needs are interesting and unpretentious.

I’d recommend this book to fans of memoir, readers who like short chapters filled with interesting trivia and an engaging narrator, and anyone who believes that we ought to live in a community with one another.
Profile Image for Jackie Sunday.
779 reviews46 followers
May 6, 2025
This is a must read; a stunning revelation of what a USPS carrier does every day.

We think we know. They are a big part of our lives. Yet, most of us have no idea of the hard work that goes on behind the scenes.

Stephen Grant recalled the hardship of losing his top marketing job at 51 years old during the pandemic. He gave a personal account of what it was like to go from a professional job to one of manual labor in the Blue Mountains of Blacksburg, Virginia.

His writing was engaging with stories of the people – some whom we wanted to hug. He revealed how he passed the initial test of being a carrier, learning the difficult back-road routes and putting up with unexpected issues like dogs.

He also tossed in some historical facts and talked about the importance of food, drinks, the right clothes and temperament on the road. Other big topics included: the post office vehicle, guns that aren’t allowed, his views on politics and the importance of family and friends.

Mail carriers are a huge part of our lives. We depend on what they bring us and wave to them when they pass by. It was insightful to read all about one person’s highs to lows and everything in between.
Profile Image for CatReader.
939 reviews152 followers
August 5, 2025
Stephen Starring Grant is a market researcher by training and was a United States Postal Service (USPS) mailman by accident/coincidence for around a year, an experience he writes about in his 2025 memoir entitled Mailman. This work is part fish-out-of-water memoir, part social commentary, and I think it mostly works. Grant's impetus for his career change was being laid off from his white collar job and newly diagnosed with prostate cancer (though thankfully not an aggressive one that needed immediate treatment) at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. So, he takes a job as a USPS mail carrier in rural Blacksburg, Virginia so that he and his family have health insurance and ends up spending a year immersed in a physically demanding, often thankless line of work.

As someone who has family from a neighboring part of Appalachia (another town on the New River in neighboring West Virginia), I found a lot of the regional and cultural observations Grant makes resonant. The Blacksburg area in northwestern Virginia is vividly rendered, and there’s real texture to his account of the rural delivery routes and local characters that sometimes skirts the fine line being caricature and authenticity. Another piece of the book that resonated with me was Grant's descriptions of being an outsider navigating an under-resourced system. He doesn’t shy away from discussing the absurdities and bureaucratic inefficiencies of the USPS, like comically outdated trucks and a workplace culture where making waves isn’t worth the inevitable blowback from management. At the same time, he writes with genuine respect and admiration for his fellow USPS employees doing very difficult jobs. One of the more thought-provoking threads of the book is how Amazon can effectively offloaded last-mile delivery to the USPS anytime it wants, as USPS can't refuse volume, which makes the USPS' increasingly-tenuous operations model of "being asked to do more with less" even more acute.

Overall, Grant writes with wit and self-awareness, though at times he veers a bit into caricature, especially when portraying people whose political views diverge from his own. The book leans liberal, and while I understand the urge (particularly given the book's early-pandemic timeline), I do wish more nonfiction writers these days could resist the temptation to frame every narrative through a political lens. In that sense, Grant is far from alone, but I’d argue the best social memoirs are the ones that let readers draw their own conclusions without the author editorializing too hard. He also shares numerous tragicomic anecdotes where he went out of his way to do the right thing, only to have it backfire on him (similar to Kim Foster in The Meth Lunches: Food and Longing in an American City) - I think these were the experiences that propelled his character growth the most.

Grant's thesis - that there are two kinds of work: service work and non-service work - isn’t exactly new, but it’s presented with humility and from lived experience. He suggests near the end that every middle-aged American should strive to have something like a domestic Peace Corps experience - hands-on, service-focused, physically demanding, empathy-building. It’s idealistic, but coming from someone who quite literally walked the walk, it lands better than it might otherwise.

Further reading: logistics and the fragility of many essential industries
Arriving Today: From Factory to Front Door-Why Everything Has Changed About How and What We Buy by Christopher Mims - about logististics
Ninety Percent of Everything: Inside Shipping, the Invisible Industry That Puts Clothes on Your Back, Gas in Your Car, and Food on Your Plate by Rose George
How the World Ran Out of Everything: Inside the Global Supply Chain by Peter Goodman
The Next Supper: The End of Restaurants as We Knew Them, and What Comes After by Corey Mintz
Making It in America: The Almost Impossible Quest to Manufacture in the U.S.A. by Rachel Slade

My statistics:
Book 242 for 2025
Book 2168 cumulatively
2 reviews2 followers
May 20, 2025
Thanks to NetGalley for allowing me to read this book before its general release.

Overall, Mailman was a fine tale, but one that was too drawn out at times. I’ve always been fascinated with the USPS so reading about the “back office” of a post office, the training regime, and the inside of those iconic mail vehicles was really interesting. However, some of the stories seemed out of place and almost a bit repetitive. The title also mentions how Mr. Grant has cancer, but his cancer was rarely talked about throughout the entire memoir. All in all, I can’t criticize the book much because delivering the mail was Grant’s journey and story to tell. I appreciated the memoir and will definitely be sure to strike up a conversation with my mail person more often.
Profile Image for Emily Smith.
30 reviews5 followers
July 9, 2025
"Mailman: My Wild Ride Delivering the Mail in Appalachia and Finally Finding Home" will be released on July 8, 2025. A big thank you to the publisher and author for providing an Advanced Reader Copy (ARC) of this novel via NetGalley.

4 stars.

Unique and absolutely hilarious, Stephen Grant gives readers an inside look into the inner workings of the United States Postal Service through his memoir. I’ll admit, I knew little to nothing about the USPS before reading this book, but now I have to say I’m a big fan of America’s oldest self-funded organization (I even followed the USPS on Instagram!). For 240 years (WOW!!!), the USPS has connected Americans across the states, and the way this mammoth organization operates is truly fascinating. Also contrary to popular belief, it's a self-funded organization that uses ZERO American tax dollars. One of the many things I took away from the memoir is that being a letter carrier is an exhausting and thankless position. We should all be thanking our postal workers more often!

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Grant finds himself laid off without any promising job opportunities to return to corporate America. Needing health insurance, he decides to take a position as a letter carrier, which becomes the basis of his memoir.

I was originally drawn to this book because my father grew up in rural Appalachia in southwest Virginia, not far from where this memoir takes place. The descriptions of the Blue Ridge Mountains and the communities nestled within them reminded me of the trips we took to visit my father's side of the family.

One thing I wasn’t expecting from a memoir about the USPS was to find myself laughing out loud through most of the book. Grant’s ability to add humor while reflecting on the chaos we all collectively experienced during COVID-19 really showcases his talent as a writer. I truly loved this book, and if you’re looking for a unique read, make sure to add it to your TBR list!
Profile Image for Footnotes and Footfalls.
66 reviews17 followers
July 17, 2025
DNF at 50% — This book started with a fascinating premise and I was intrigued by the early sections detailing the inner workings of our postal system, mail sorting and delivery. But it quickly veered off into a one-sided political rant that felt more like a soapbox than a story. The author came across as arrogant and unlikable. I don’t mind strong language, but the profanity here was relentless and felt excessive. Add in the long-winded complaints about nearly everything, and I just couldn’t keep going. This one wasn’t for me.
Profile Image for Kelly.
764 reviews38 followers
March 5, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for providing this book in exchange for an honest review.
I'm usually interested in the behind the scenes aspects of people's jobs so this book was intriguing. I enjoyed the stories of the people the author worked with and delivered to. I do feel like there was too much focus on politics.
Profile Image for Mariana Perino.
61 reviews7 followers
August 5, 2025
I loved this memoir. I loved learning about the USPS. I loved that Steve narrated the audiobook himself.

It's crazy how quickly I forgot that during COVID, USPS was the lifeline that connected so many of us to things and people. Everyone be kind to USPS workers. That's all!
Profile Image for Zoe Zeid.
429 reviews9 followers
July 25, 2025
I loved this audiobook! It was great to have it read by the author - you could really hear the emotion in his voice as he talked about his year as a mailman. I didn't realize how much went into the job of the carriers, such as having to sort everything prior to going out on the route and mapping out the route. I also did not know the difference between rural and city carriers. I have so much new respect for our postal carriers (and I also didn't consider how much they know about us since they see our mail). I honestly would love to try my hand at being a mailman - I doubt I could do it for long!
Profile Image for Kevin Hall.
121 reviews5 followers
July 28, 2025
If I am not killed during the Water Wars by the time I'm 50 I too would like to deliver dildos to Appalachian sex hounds.
46 reviews3 followers
February 7, 2025
Mailman is the best book I’ve read so far this year-extremely well written, funny and serious, the story of a 50 year old man jettisoned from the white collar world right before the pandemic. Steve became a rural mail carrier in southern Virginia and entered the blue collar world. I loved it ! Thanks to the author, the publisher and NetGalley for the ARC
Profile Image for Christine (Queen of Books).
1,348 reviews154 followers
August 7, 2025
I was really interested in a look at life as a mail carrier. And parts of this pulled me in, such as learning about sorting and casing the mail. But overall this felt disorganized and the mix of content was a head-scratcher at best.

For example, the author hammers someone's mailbox shut, making his mail undeliverable, because the resident yelled at the mailman's daughter for not closing the mailbox. You know, the daughter who shouldn't even have been delivering mail in the first place. The author simultaneously sells the sanctity of the mail and sees nothing wrong with his kids participating in his route - fine. But to then ruin someone's mailbox, and report that behavior to your readers? Honestly, WTF.

He also details a time when his father sprayed neighboring dogs with ammonia. Like, that was his initial response to dogs scaring his son coming home from school. Why not speak to the owners about them keeping the dogs in the backyard instead of the front, or keeping them inside around the time school lets out? No, let's storm off and injure them instead. I'm sorry, these aren't fun little anecdotes to me. At the very least they needed much better contextualization.

Man, am I here for discussions of how to be in your community, how to build that community... but this author lost me so many times along the way. I'd have preferred far more stories about his time on the job and fewer pages focused on his opinions. I should have DNFed but I kept waiting to get back to the daily grind of delivering the mail - instead I got an account of his (illegally) carrying a gun on the job and a chapter focused on his religious experiences.

Thank you to Simon Books for a free copy of this title for review.
Profile Image for Amy Sugerman.
143 reviews9 followers
July 28, 2025
I just loved this book. And it now happily sits on my Favorites of the Year shelf! Steve Grant reads like a real regular guy to me, but his insights are profound and his humor is hilarious. I especially connected to his values of the importance of home and community, strong work ethic, kindness and grace, giving back, and our own particular place in this very big and beautiful world.

Written just prior to Trump’s return to office, I can only imagine the author’s horror, shared by so many, of the ruthless decimation of our public institutions that serve so many.

A companion book to Mailman might be one I’m now reading. Who is Government? The untold Story of Public Service, a collection of essays edited by Michael Lewis.
Profile Image for The Bookish Elf.
2,678 reviews389 followers
July 14, 2025
Stephen Starring Grant's Mailman: My Wild Ride Delivering the Mail in Appalachia and Finally Finding Home arrives at a moment when Americans are wrestling with questions about purpose, community, and what it means to serve something larger than oneself. This memoir chronicles Grant's transformation from a laid-off marketing consultant to a rural mail carrier in his hometown of Blacksburg, Virginia, during the pandemic's early months—a journey that becomes both deeply personal and surprisingly universal.

The Story Behind the Story

The narrative begins with stark vulnerability. Grant, at fifty and recently diagnosed with cancer, finds himself unemployed when the pandemic shutters his boutique marketing consultancy. Needing health insurance desperately, he takes what seems like a temporary position as a Rural Carrier Associate with the United States Postal Service. What unfolds is a year-long odyssey that reconnects him with his Appalachian roots, his family, and his sense of civic duty.

Grant's prose carries the conversational ease of someone who has spent decades in corporate boardrooms but retains the earthy wisdom of his mountain upbringing. His voice shifts seamlessly between self-deprecating humor and moments of genuine philosophical insight, creating a narrative texture that feels both accessible and intellectually substantial.

Strengths That Deliver
Authentic Character Development

Grant excels at portraying the colorful cast of postal workers who become his teachers and companions. Characters like Kat, his guardian angel trainer with a West Virginia accent "strong enough to remind me of my mamaw," and Cash, whose quiet competence masks deep wells of integrity, emerge as fully realized individuals rather than workplace archetypes. These relationships provide the memoir's emotional backbone, demonstrating how shared purpose can forge unlikely bonds.

Rich Sense of Place

The author's descriptions of the Blue Ridge Mountains and rural Virginia landscapes are particularly compelling. Grant writes with the precision of someone who understands that geography shapes character. His route descriptions—from the Corporate Research Center's maze of identical buildings to the muddy driveways of mountain hollows—create a vivid sense of the territory he covers, both literally and metaphorically.

Political Nuance in Polarized Times

One of the memoir's most impressive achievements is its handling of political division. Rather than retreating into partisan talking points, Grant navigates the cultural tensions of contemporary America with remarkable dexterity. His encounters with customers across the political spectrum—from Trump supporters to university professors—are rendered with empathy and genuine curiosity about what drives people's beliefs.

The Pandemic as Backdrop

Grant captures the surreal quality of 2020 without allowing it to overwhelm his personal story. The pandemic becomes a character in its own right, creating the conditions that lead to his career change while highlighting the essential nature of postal work during a time of national crisis.

Areas Where the Route Gets Bumpy
Structural Inconsistencies

While Grant's episodic approach generally works well, some chapters feel more like collected anecdotes than integral parts of a cohesive narrative. The memoir occasionally loses momentum when it veers into extended tangents about postal history or technical details of mail sorting that, while interesting, don't always serve the larger story.

Family Dynamics Underdeveloped

Although Grant writes movingly about his relationship with his daughters and his father's death, some family relationships remain frustratingly opaque. His wife Alicia, who provides crucial support throughout his career transition, never fully emerges as a three-dimensional character. The memoir would benefit from deeper exploration of how his career change affected family dynamics beyond surface-level interactions.

Economic Realities Glossed Over

Grant acknowledges the financial hardship of transitioning from a well-paid consultant to a part-time postal worker, but he doesn't fully reckon with the privilege that made this transition possible. His ability to take a massive pay cut while maintaining his family's lifestyle suggests resources that many Americans facing similar job losses simply don't have.

The Art of Blue-Collar Memoir

Grant joins a tradition of writers who find profound meaning in seemingly ordinary work. His prose style borrows from this lineage while maintaining its own distinctive voice. Like Matthew Crawford in Shop Class as Soulcraft or Tim Kreider in We Learn Nothing, Grant understands that physical labor can provide insights unavailable to purely cerebral pursuits.

The memoir's greatest achievement lies in its portrayal of work as a form of service. Grant transforms the mundane act of mail delivery into something approaching sacred duty, writing: "The whole world is coming with all its inevitability—promises made and broken, cookbooks, novels, instruction manuals, histories of the distant and recent past... We carry it for you."

Technical Mastery and Literary Merit

Grant's background in marketing and his MFA from the Iowa Writers' Workshop serve him well. His sentences carry the efficiency of business writing combined with the precision of literary prose. He has a particular gift for dialogue that captures regional speech patterns without caricature, and his descriptive passages achieve genuine lyrical beauty without becoming overwrought.

The memoir's structure follows a traditional arc of crisis, transformation, and resolution, but Grant avoids the trap of neat conclusions. His year as a mailman doesn't solve all his problems or provide easy answers about American division. Instead, it offers something more valuable: a model for how honest work and genuine human connection can provide meaning in uncertain times.

Critical Assessment

At approximately 300 pages, the memoir maintains good pacing throughout most of its length, though some middle chapters lag when Grant becomes too focused on postal procedures rather than personal development. His treatment of class issues, while generally thoughtful, occasionally reveals blind spots about his own privilege.

The book's emotional honesty represents its greatest strength. Grant doesn't present himself as a hero or his postal colleagues as saints. Instead, he offers a clear-eyed view of both the satisfactions and frustrations of service work, the dignity found in completing necessary tasks well, and the complex reality of contemporary American life.

Final Verdict

Mailman: My Wild Ride Delivering the Mail in Appalachia and Finally Finding Home succeeds as both personal memoir and social commentary. Grant's year as a postal worker becomes a lens through which to examine larger questions about work, community, and purpose in contemporary America. While not without flaws, the memoir offers genuine insights about finding meaning through service and the value of essential work often taken for granted.

Grant has crafted a book that manages to be simultaneously specific to his experience and universal in its themes. His journey from corporate consultant to mail carrier illuminates possibilities for authentic work and genuine human connection that feel increasingly rare in our digital age. Most importantly, he demonstrates that meaning often emerges not from grand gestures but from showing up consistently, doing necessary work well, and serving others with dignity and respect.

For readers seeking inspiration about midlife career changes, insights into rural American life, or simply a well-told story about finding purpose through service, Mailman delivers exactly what it promises: an honest, humorous, and ultimately hopeful account of one man's unexpected path home.
Profile Image for Lindsay.
86 reviews
June 15, 2025
I was a mail carrier for 2 years and this book brought back a lot of those memories from orientation to first day of training and then finally realizing you got a new job and were going to be able to leave soon. It was one of the toughest jobs I think I have ever had. This book was well written and really explained all of those feelings and inner workings of being in the post office. I felt like I was experiencing all those moments again. It is definitely an interesting read for those who are wondering what it is like to be a mail carrier, especially a rural one.
Profile Image for Kalyan.
208 reviews13 followers
August 22, 2025
Okay, this book is very, very good. I expected it to be a certain way but I had my doubts, like what could a mailman really tell. The author comes from the corporate world, got laid off, and then took a rural mailman job, which makes his perspective even more interesting and relatable.

It probably resonated with me because I’m also between jobs right now, doing some part-time work while looking for something permanent, so maybe that biased me a bit. But I really like the author’s attitude and the way he tells his story. I honestly didn’t expect there to be a shitload of things involved in delivering mail, but there is, and the book never felt fake or padded with nonsense.

He shared some unique insights that only someone with his corporate background mixed with this rural experience could have. I came out of it with more respect for mailmen, for everyday life, and for the reality of how jobs come and go. The way he talks about finding what’s permanent and what’s not really made me rethink a few things. In a good way, because he put it into words better than I ever could.

I really like this book. If I can get a copy, any version, I’ll buy it and keep it in my library. Loved it. And if I ever get the chance, I’ll talk to, tweet, or email the author to tell him he did a great job.
Profile Image for Kim.
223 reviews5 followers
August 2, 2025
I really enjoyed this and found the entertainment value and humor high. There were some obvious points that the author felt very strongly about getting across and he definitely circled back to them ad nauseam. Towards the end that felt a bit tedious but I otherwise had a delightful time!
Profile Image for Christina Travaglini.
20 reviews
September 8, 2025
4.5 ✨ Absolutely loved this memoir from cover to cover. It’s funny, informative, and surprisingly thought-provoking. I’ll never look at a USPS mail carrier the same way again. This book gave me a whole new appreciation for their world and the mail that arrives at the end of my driveway.
Profile Image for Olivia Swindler.
Author 2 books54 followers
September 2, 2025
This book was a wonderfully wholesome read. I go back and forth on if I can read books about the pandemic, but this memoir felt like a good balance. While overwritten at times, I really enjoyed learning about the Post Office and the inner workings of being a mail carrier.
Profile Image for Meg Comunale.
214 reviews1 follower
Read
August 21, 2025
enjoyed learning about the mail system esp based in southern virginia where we hike a lot
not a fan of reading any type of current politics esp that didn’t have to do with the mail….bc books are supposed to be my escape from that.
513 reviews5 followers
July 26, 2025
This memoir is a lot more than just a story about the USPS. Certainly, the details are there and they are covered at a granular level. Grant provides enough detail for anyone to understand just what is involved in the daily work of a letter carrier—everything from sorting to driving the route. But there is so much more there. He talks about friendship, loyalty, patriotism, history, politics, philosophy, religion, family, culture, service, learning, weather, clothing, guns, etc., etc.. All of this is wrapped in a package (pun intended) filled with humor, humility and, above all, humanity. Let me be clear. Grant covers a lot of territory in this memoir but he never strays far from his main theme—what it's like to be a mailman. That is its overwhelming appeal. After reading this book, I dare anyone to not have a new appreciation—maybe even love—for their mailman.
Profile Image for Kate (kate_reads_).
1,853 reviews312 followers
July 17, 2025
This started off so strong for me—funny, sharp, and unexpectedly moving. There’s a real gift in the way he weaves personal reflection with larger commentary about class, identity, and American systems. His reverence for the USPS and its unsung role in our daily lives is clear—and often well-earned.

But as the book went on, the structure started to feel a bit repetitive. The same themes resurfaced in slightly different packaging, and I found myself wishing he’d trust the reader a little more—let some things land without needing to restate the thesis every chapter. That said, there are still standout passages all the way through, and the later sections add weight and vulnerability that deepen the narrative. His personal history with gun violence, for example, retroactively reframes a lot of what came earlier.

It didn’t quite sustain the momentum of the early chapters for me, but I’m glad I read it. There’s something meaningful here—especially if you’ve ever stood in line at the post office and wondered what worlds were tucked behind the counter. Thank you Simon & Schuster for the gifted book.
Profile Image for Kelly.
34 reviews
May 31, 2025
I am from this area and it gave me a bit of nostalgia as he discusses the locations where he worked. The peek behind the scenes of the post office was more interesting than I imagined it would be. It felt like the writing needed one more edit, but who am I to say.
471 reviews25 followers
July 27, 2025
DNF. I couldn't push through the F bombs, taking the Lord's name in vain, and smug woke shaming.
19 reviews
July 17, 2025
Tough to wade through

I grew up southern rural poor, a lot of red-neck in the family. LOL. I understand the desire to go back home. The problem I have is the constant political statements he throws in, always one-sided. As a moderate(and a little libertarian), this dilutes the story. There are SO MANY books that do this, it makes you wary and cynical of the whole story. Thought this was gonna be interesting and fun, my mistake. Hope you like it.
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