When:
January 21, 2025 @ 7:30 pm – 8:30 pm America/Chicago Timezone
2025-01-21T19:30:00-06:00
2025-01-21T20:30:00-06:00
Where:
Online Via Zoom
Cost:
Free
Contact:
Anne Melia

For our January 21st book club, we will be reading Heartland: A Memoir of Working Hard and Being Broke in the Richest Country on Earth by Sarah Smarsh.

To register, click here to email Anne Melia, JEDI book club organizer.

Anne shares: “Sarah Smarsh, who grew up poor in rural Kansas, has a unique perspective and voice in today’s journalistic landscape. It is a perspective that we have not explored much in our book club…
I recently had the chance to attend a book event here in Kansas City and was so impressed by her conversation with the audience. I confess that I have been a huge fan since her first book came out, and I appreciate her even more now.”
Here is the Goodreads summary:

“During Sarah Smarsh’s turbulent childhood in Kansas in the 1980s and 1990s, the forces of cyclical poverty and the country’s changing economic policies solidified her family’s place among the working poor.

By telling the story of her life and the lives of the people she loves, Smarsh challenges us to look more closely at the class divide in our country and examine the myths about people thought to be less because they earn less. 

Her personal history affirms the corrosive impact intergenerational poverty can have on individuals, families, and communities, and she explores this idea as lived experience, metaphor, and level of consciousness.

Smarsh was born a fifth generation Kansas wheat farmer on her paternal side and the product of generations of teen mothers on her maternal side. Through her experiences growing up as the daughter of a dissatisfied young mother and raised predominantly by her grandmother on a farm thirty miles west of Wichita, we are given a unique and essential look into the lives of poor and working class Americans living in the heartland. Combining memoir with powerful analysis and cultural commentary, Heartland is an uncompromising look at class, identity, and the particular perils of having less in a country known for its excess.”

To register, click here to email Anne Melia, JEDI book club organizer.