Hillbilly Elegy

memoir by Vance
print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

External Websites
Also known as: “Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis”
In full:
Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis

News

JD Vance: the VP candidate raised in a Rust Belt home by a drug-addict mother Nov. 5, 2024, 9:02 AM ET (The Telegraph)
How his ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ catapulted J.D. Vance to Trump’s vice-president pick Oct. 31, 2024, 11:41 PM ET (South China Morning Post)

Hillbilly Elegy is the best-selling 2016 memoir by J.D. Vance. In it the future U.S. senator and vice presidential nominee writes with candor and compassion about what it was like to grow up in “an Ohio steel town that has been hemorrhaging jobs and hope for as long as I can remember.” The book, which was turned into a movie in 2020, helped launch Vance’s political career.

Summary

In Hillbilly Elegy, Vance uses sometimes-hard-to-read stories of his upbringing in Ohio and Kentucky in the 1980s and ’90s to draw conclusions about the political mindset of the people and places that helped form him and that he ultimately escaped from. His mother was addicted to drugs and was at times completely neglectful of her son and at other times so terrifying that he feared she would kill him. He writes movingly about his abiding affection for his “Mamaw” and “Papaw”—his mother’s parents—and the life lessons and values they instilled in him. “There is nothing lower than the poor stealing from the poor,” Mamaw tells him. “It’s hard enough as it is. We sure as hell don’t need to make it even harder on each other.”

And yet even that relationship was not without violence and heartache. Papaw’s alcoholism reached a point that when he came home drunk after having been warned by his wife to never do so again, she set him on fire. (He survived.) Throughout the book, Vance seems to understand and yet embrace the family dysfunction. After recounting a litany of events that includes a seemingly endless cycle of violence and retribution, Vance writes:

Some people may conclude that I come from a clan of lunatics. But the stories made me feel like hillbilly royalty, because these were classic good-versus-evil stories, and my people were on the right side.

By the time he was in the 10th grade, Vance had moved out of his mother’s home and in with his grandparents for good. It was with Mamaw’s help—“we didn’t have nice clothes, but Mamaw made sure that I had one of those graphing calculators”—that Vance began to see his way out of a life of despair. He enlisted in the Marines, where he served for four formative years, and then went on to the Ohio State University and Yale Law School.

Nonetheless, he writes in a clear-eyed fashion that makes apparent he recognizes he was one of the lucky ones: “The statistics tell you that kids like me face a grim future—that if they’re lucky, they’ll manage to avoid welfare; and if they’re unlucky, they’ll die of a heroin overdose.”

Vance also brings his conservative political sensibilities to the table—sensibilities that coldly point out that some of those around him are living lives of desperation while doing little to improve their plight. At one point, he recounts his frustration at working a summer job at a grocery store and seeing neighbors who were on welfare waiting in his line chatting on their cellphones; he could not afford a cellphone, he writes.

Are you a student?
Get a special academic rate on Britannica Premium.

Praise and criticism

When it was published in 2016, Hillbilly Elegy became a cultural touch point, spending more than a year on The New York Times best-seller list. After Vance was chosen by Donald Trump to be his running mate in July 2024, the book again topped best-seller lists.

Reviews in the Times, The Washington Post, and others were largely laudatory, with the Times summing up the book by saying “Mr. Vance doesn’t have all the answers. But he’s advancing the conversation.” Others were more critical, with The Guardian’s review saying “Vance’s stories of hillbilly pathology are peculiarly reminiscent of the ‘welfare queen’ stories deployed against black people during the Reagan years to justify his assault on the social safety net.” People from Appalachia were some of the harshest critics, saying that the book used stereotypes to advance its political agenda. “The film and book need Appalachia to be poor, broken, and dirty, because they depend on us believing that the mountains are somewhere we want Vance to escape,” Cassie Chambers Armstrong wrote in The Atlantic in 2020.

Hillbilly Elegy was made into a film, directed by Ron Howard and starring Gabriel Basso as Vance and Glenn Close as Mamaw. The 2020 movie received largely poor reviews, but Close was nominated for an Academy Award for best supporting actress.

Tracy Grant