The two great literary bookends of President Trump’s half-term of grift and chaos have come from survivors of the most broken white communities that helped put him in office. They also show us the best way out of the basement of American despair.
How J.D. Vance, the author of “Hillbilly Elegy,” and Tara Westover, who wrote “Educated,” escaped physical and psychological horror is the dose of Charles Dickens that makes these two memoirs so memorable.I admit I liked Westover's Educated better than Vance's Hillbilly Elegy, though each resonated with me in powerful ways. As for the latter, I have written a published response, which is included in a collection of essays just out from West Virginia University Press, Appalachian Reckoning: A Region Responds to Hillbilly Elegy. The book is available for pre-order now and has received starred reviews from both Kirkus and Forward Reviews, which called it "[s]tunning in its intellectual and creative riches." Publishers's Weekly also gave it a very positive review. My chapter is called "What Hillbilly Elegy Reveals about Race in 21st Century America."
I'll be on a panel discussing the book in March at the Appalachian Studies Association meeting in Asheville, North Carolina. Below is a screenshot of a Tweet by one of the volume's editors, Meredith McCarroll. I think we're all still in shock that Ron Howard has paid $45 million for one man's very skewed and partial insights into his upbringing.
Cross-posted to Legal Ruralism.
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