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home arrow our bloggers arrow political prose arrow My book, The Missing Class, is now available
My book, The Missing Class, is now available PDF Print Email
By Victor Tan Chen
Monday, August 27, 2007

The Missing Class: Portraits of the Near Poor in America

NOTE: You can find The Missing Class at your bookstore, or order it on Amazon or Powells.com. (Use these links and a portion of the sale price goes to InTheFray.)

 

Sorry that I've been away from this blog for so long. One of the reasons for the delay is that the book I co-authored — The Missing Class: Portraits of the Near Poor in America — has just come out. The New York Times mentions the book in Sunday's edition.

I co-authored The Missing Class with Princeton sociologist Katherine S. Newman. Senator John Edwards wrote the foreword. The book focuses on the nearly one in five Americans who live just above the poverty line, a population much larger than those living in poverty. They work long hours, sometimes at multiple jobs, but they do not receive many public benefits (which are for the poor) and lack real financial security. In fact, some of the families we write about eventually fell back into poverty after a layoff, divorce, illness, or other crisis.

My hope is that through the stories of the nine families profiled in this book, we can bring more attention to this ignored population and inspire discussion about policies that could keep these hard-working Americans from slipping back down the economic ladder. Poverty takes a toll not just on the families who suffer it, but also on society in general, which must bear the collective costs in ruined health, growing crime, blighted neighborhoods, and wasted potential. We should be doing more to help these families avoid such a fate.

There will be some book events and radio/TV interviews in the coming months. Please check this blog (inthefray.org/politicalprose) for the latest schedule. And please spread the word!

 

UPDATED 9/26/07: Please see more recent posts for an updated schedule.

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Disabled Senior Citizen has Questions...
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There are three of us sisters who live together. Two of us worked as Professionals in the Mental Health field for years. We are all disabled. I'm 100% physically disabled, my one sister has Paranoid Schitzophrenia, and the other now receives Widow benefits. We are ages 61, 58,and 51. The total of all 3 of our incomes is below poverty level.

Our Mentally ill sister is the only one who gets food stamps, and has Medicaid.
The food pantries would be more helpful if we were allowed to go to more than one pantry a month, and the same one all the time. We could write a book too !

How does the Gov. figure that people can live on this kind of income without a cost of living increase that meets todays needs ?
God Bless You for your work in this area.
Arlyne L.Warner
Arlyne L.Warner | June 21, 2008

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A racially integrated community is a chronological term timed from the entrance of the first black family to the exit of the last white family. —Saul Alinsky, American community organizer
 
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