Class War: A Tale of Two Americas
By (Author) Evelyn Nieves
Skyhorse Publishing
Sky Pony Press
23rd May 2017
United States
General
Non Fiction
Poverty and precarity
305.50973
Hardback
160
Width 153mm, Height 229mm
As the wealth gap cuts deeper through the USleaving the poor and an increasingly stressed middle class huddled in growing misery on one side, with an evermore bloated plutocracy sunning itself on the far lofty perchwe are witnessing the making of a new America. It is a country of jagged contrastsof enormous, careless, Gatsbyesque wealth alongside a brutal landscape of homeless encampments, the working poor, and a distraught, shrinking middle class.
American journalism likes to focus on winners, the masters of the universe who amass fortunes with their brilliant brainstorms or their legalized thievery. But the reality for the vast majority of us bears little resemblance to the American Dream that politicians still celebrate, against all economic and social evidence. The two Americas have diverged so widely that even some far-sighted billionaires and their endowed economists have begun to feel uneasy, nervously eyeing the gray masses below them and wondering when they will finally rise up.
Now Evelyn Nieves, a reporter who covered poverty in American for the New York Times and Washington Post, travels through the country to record what she sees and to gauge the public mood in this winter of our discontent. Nieves visits homeless tent cities, Indian reservations and communities so economically shattered that the black market in prescription drugs is all that keeps them afloat. She also shares infused cocktails and organic, locally-sourced appetizers with the one-percent crowd, trying to figure out what makes them tick, and how they view their plush lives in the midst of increasing hardship.
Welcome to pre-revolutionary Americaor the Disunited States.
Evelyn Nieves grew up in the Bronx, where she developed a passion for covering under-covered communities and issues surrounding poverty and social justice. She has spent three decades telling the stories of struggling Americans as a staff writer for the New York Times, Washington Post and Associated Press, and, in recent years, as an independent journalist. She lives in San Francisco, California.