Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think Vance is a con artist. Grandparents with a $100K HHI and a mom who graduated top of her high school class, became a nurse, step dad who made at least $75K as truck driver isn't "working poor." And the town he grew up in in Ohio is STILL a pretty pleasant place. I think he's a smart nerd from Ohio that stole all the content for this book from white trash he saw in Kentucky.
Joined the military to pay for college? No. I think he's a clever nerd that wanted bonafides so he could get into an elite law school, write a book, run for office. The fact that Tiger Mom herself was his mentor at Yale tells you everything.
I don't think you read the book. His mom was addicted his entire childhood and did not mother him. His entire family was deeply dysfunctional and traumatized. You can decide he was lying, I suppose, but if you accept that it is a faithful attempt and autobiography you have to accept that his family was very broken.
I am reading Dream Land now, about the rise of opiate addiction in the US and the role of a small town drug-producing town in Mexico and the pain clinic industry - its a good journalistic companion piece to Hillbilly Elegy, I think.
Just finished the book and thought it was good. But I cannot figure our why someone so smart, from the background is a conservative.
Anonymous wrote:I think Vance is a con artist. Grandparents with a $100K HHI and a mom who graduated top of her high school class, became a nurse, step dad who made at least $75K as truck driver isn't "working poor." And the town he grew up in in Ohio is STILL a pretty pleasant place. I think he's a smart nerd from Ohio that stole all the content for this book from white trash he saw in Kentucky.
Joined the military to pay for college? No. I think he's a clever nerd that wanted bonafides so he could get into an elite law school, write a book, run for office. The fact that Tiger Mom herself was his mentor at Yale tells you everything.
jsteele wrote:Has anyone read "Hillbilly Elegy" and interested in talking about it? I just finished the book and have very mixed feelings. It was an interesting memoir, but I don't feel like it lived up to its billing. I don't think that it shed a lot of light on the greater community of "hillbillies". While it was good at highlighting problems, I would have liked to have seen more analysis of the causes of those problems and ideas for solutions.
I'd be interested to hear thoughts about this book from those who are well-read in similar literature about the black community, such as Ta-Nehisi Coates' books. I think there could be some interesting similarities.
Anonymous wrote:I am 10:56 poster. Thanks for the prompt to read it after all. I am a liberal, but happen to see the poor whites I know as using the government aid as their support, so I am not sure if the government is helping or hurting by having a host of programs that provide money, food and rent help every month. As long as they don't want any more in life, my family seems to be fine not applying themselves, not yearning to move forward, and watching TV all day long, living from aid check to aid check.
Oh, and this is a good time to add that those who voted, voted for Trump.
Anonymous wrote:I am from a poor white trash family in the Midwest. I was looking forward to reading this book this month. Sorry to hear it is just so-so.
What boggles my mind (the only person in my family who "got out" with scholarships and went to college, and the only one not on some sort of government aid... I kid you not) is how no one in my extended family wants to improve their lot in life. I would love some discussion and insights on this. My husband thinks I was switched in the hospital (his explanation of how I emerged)! Lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I"m from a small town in middle America that is awfully hillbilly. (though there are no hills around - I'd call them more country). I've had this on my to read list and have seen the guy on TV talking about the book and read a few reviews. What what I've read, it seems like your impression - it's an interesting story of one family, but doesn't necessarily translate well - is the general impression.
So not sure how much I will push to read it - maybe if it pops up at the library. The one thing I will say is that if you're not related or otherwise familiar with white people like this, you don't really get it. My personal experience living in DC surrounded by white liberal educated folks is that there is a huge disconnect from white, lower class, more poorly educated folks.
Perhaps you think there's s disconnect , but there's something you need to understand about white liberals —they keep and settle scores . For decades white liberals were demonized in this country by the very people cited in that book and their handlers of the Republican Party . Godless, immoral , welfare distributors , anti American , and so on and so forth.
Today the chickens have come home to roost, does it cross those people minds that the social programs that they virulently opposed because it was going to benefit those 'other people ' or because government is bad might have gone a long way in lessening their burden? Suffering? Pain? Furthermore , unlike their 'God fearing' white conservatives counterparts , liberals have known and cknowledged that those 'other people' have a unique history in this country and faced atrocities that even the poorest of the poor whites hasn't and still doesn't face till this day and as such public policy need to be cognizant of these historical factors and do whatever it takes so members of that community get a fair and legitimate shot at real EMANCIPATION
Long story short, white liberals today have no use for the kind of whites described in that book and rightfully so.
NP and not white but all this ^^^^^^^^^ is why Trump is winning.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. You're right about the getting out and returning. And it's hard to see that happening much.
Similar to: You hear that story, rarely, about say, a college basketball star who gets a really good education, then goes back and gets involved in his or her city community.
Anecdotally, I have NEVER heard of someone getting out of KY or wherever, getting a masters or Ph.D., then going back to live and work in that same community. Not even a human interest story on the evening news.
Anonymous wrote:There were some nuggets in there I wanted him to expand on further. Like the people on welfare complaining about other people on welfare. I wanted him to drill down into that and talk about why. Or how they all talk about personal responsibility but don't walk the walk...WHY?
All in all I agree with Jeff- ok book. Not up to the hype.