Hillbilly Elegy

272 pages

Published Nov. 8, 2016 by Harper Collins.

ISBN:
978-978-006-230-9
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4 stars (65 reviews)

9 editions

Review of 'Hillbilly Elegy' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

The sections that are memoir are compelling and interesting.

When the author departs from describing his experience to pontificating on sociology, it's very intensely annoying. He'll describes some behavior he sees in a family member or friends, and attributes it to being a Hillbilly -- when it just sounds like common human behavior to me. He almost seems to think that dysfunctional families that argue and/or have problems with addiction are unique to Appalachia.

His discussion of government programs is similarly driven by anecdotes, with no reference to any other evidence or analysis. He says that a neighbor lived on Welfare her whole life, and this is a Hillbilly thing. I'm sure that as a child, it appeared to him that this person never held down a job, but the "Welfare Reform" passed by the Republican Congress made that pretty impossible starting in the 1990s. Also, trying to get by …

Review of 'Hillbilly Elegy' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

This is essential reading on the impact of class and environment on a child's outcomes. It must have been hard to write this as clear-eyed as Vance did, pairing his own life alongside the research. He recognizes that he beat the odds and the great luck that it took for him to be able to do so, and presents a stark picture of what it takes for others to do the same. There's plenty of rich fodder for both conservatives and liberals to glean insights on poverty and welfare here.

Review of 'Hillbilly Elegy' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Wow.  I read this book in one sitting.  I spent the whole time nodding my head.  I got out of bed to start writing this to make of the thoughts flying around my brain.  Before reading the book I had heard that it was controversial.  After reading it I have no idea why.


This is the story of most of the people I know.

I've often summed up my husband and I like this:




  • My husband is what happens when you educate a hillbilly.

  • I'm what happens when two educated hillbillies breed.

In my life I've lived in Western Pennsylvania, East Tennessee, Central Ohio, and Northeast Ohio.  I don't wander far from Appalachia.  Most white people I know have roots somewhere deeper in Appalachia.  I had never considered that the reason for this was a migration north of people from coal mining country to the industrial centers farther north in …

Review of 'Hillbilly Elegy' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

The reason this is one of the current "it books" is that it's being marketed as providing insights into the minds of members of the disaffected, white working class that make up most of Trump's supporters. But in reality, it's 85% memoir with a bit of policy philosophy thrown in, and the memoir seems structured to underscore the Horatio Alger myth and explain why the poor are largely to blame for their own circumstances. The author throws out some interesting questions, but doesn't provide much in the way of answers. Although it's now rather outdated, I still think "What's The Matter With Kansas?" is a better read on this topic. "Hillbilly Elegy" can't decide whether it wants to be a memoir or political theory, and ends up being successful at neither.

Review of 'Hillbilly Elegy' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This book has forever changed the way I see lower-class, white culture. There's no way to read it without empathy for the kind of life experiences that J.D Vance and his family have gone through - the traumatic childhood events that would shape his expectations for adult relationships. But Vance doesn't want us to think that it's a "cycle of violence" or a forgone conclusion. He believes low expectations and a learned hopelessness are also causes, and pouring outside help in the form of things such increased money for public schools won't help kids who don't have a room in their house where they can't hear screaming and fighting. He believes it has to be an internal change within the community, and attributes the changes in his own life to the love of his Mamaw and Papaw, and the examples of a few family members in positive relationships.

One aspect …

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