Читать книгу Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis - J. Vance D. - Страница 4
Praise for Hillbilly Elegy:
Оглавление‘A beautifully and powerfully written memoir, Hillbilly Elegy is shocking, heartbreaking, gut-wrenching and hysterically funny. It’s also a profoundly important book, one that opens a window on a part of America usually hidden from view and offers genuine hope in the form of hard-hitting honesty. Hillbilly Elegy announces the arrival of a gifted and utterly original new writer and should be required reading for everyone who cares about what’s really happening in America’ AMY CHUA, New York Times bestselling author of The Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother
‘Powerful and highly readable account of the plight of the poor white Americans in Kentucky’ Books of the Year, Financial Times
‘Essential reading for all yankophiles, politicians and anyone interested in how Donald Trump won over the rust belt to arrive at the White House’ Books of the Year, Sunday Times
‘Vance’s vivid portrayal of blue-collar America has made it a bestseller in that country, though the political disaffection he describes will also resonate with British readers’ Mail on Sunday
‘The most important recent book about America’ Economist
‘The memoir gripping America … Vividly articulates the despair and disillusionment of blue-collar America’ Sunday Times
‘A tough-edged elegy for “white trash” hillbilly America’ DAVID AARONOVITCH, The Times
‘I bought this to try to better understand Trump’s appeal to those white working-class people who feel left behind, but the memoir is so much more than that … It’s an important social history/commentary but also a gripping, unputdownable page-turner’ INDIA KNIGHT, Evening Standard
‘A beautiful memoir but it is equally a work of cultural criticism about white working-class America … [Vance] offers a compelling explanation for why it’s so hard for someone who grew up the way he did to make it … a riveting book’ Wall Street Journal
‘Quietly thoughtful, poignant … while the political timeliness of Hillbilly Elegy is undeniable, Vance truly shines when he takes us with him “down the holler” into an America we thought we knew – until we realized how little of it we truly understood’ Huffington Post
‘[A] compassionate, discerning sociological analysis … Combining thoughtful inquiry with firsthand experience, Mr. Vance has inadvertently provided a civilized reference guide for an uncivilized election, and he’s done so in a vocabulary intelligible to both Democrats and Republicans. Imagine that’ JENNIFER SENIOR, New York Times
‘[Vance’s] description of the culture he grew up in is essential reading for this moment in history’ DAVID BROOKS, New York Times
‘[A] frank, unsentimental, harrowing memoir … a superb book’ New York Post
‘[An] understated, engaging debut … An unusually timely and deeply affecting view of a social class whose health and economic problems are making headlines in this election year’ Kirkus Reviews
‘Both heartbreaking and heartwarming, this memoir is akin to investigative journalism … A quick and engaging read, this book is well suited to anyone interested in a study of modern America, as Vance’s assertions about Appalachia are far more reaching’ Library Journal
‘Couldn’t have been better timed … a harrowing portrait of much that has gone wrong in America over the past two generations … an honest look at the dysfunction that afflicts too many working-class Americans’ National Review
‘Vance compellingly describes the terrible toll that alcoholism, drug abuse, and an unrelenting code of honor took on his family, neither excusing the behavior nor condemning it … The portrait that emerges is a complex one … Unerringly forthright, remarkably insightful, and refreshingly focused, Hillbilly Elegy is the cry of a community in crisis’ Booklist
‘To understand the rage and disaffection of America’s working-class whites, look to Greater Appalachia. In Hillbilly Elegy, J. D. Vance confronts us with the economic and spiritual travails of this forgotten corner of our country. Here we find women and men who dearly love their country, yet who feel powerless as their way of life is devastated. Never before have I read a memoir so powerful, and so necessary’ REIHAN SALAM, National Review
‘Elites tend to see our social crisis in terms of “stagnation” or “inequality”. J. D. Vance writes powerfully about the real people who are kept out of sight by academic abstractions’ PETER THIEL, entrepreneur, investor, and author of Zero to One