We Are Not Okay

Elegy for a Broken America

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Pub Date 1 Oct 2022 | Archive Date 21 Sep 2022
Indie Blu(e) Publishing | Independent Book Publishers Association (IBPA), Members' Titles

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Description

Christian Livermore grew up a shy little girl in a turbulent family sunk in poverty, violence, substance abuse and mental illness. She ate government cheese, suffered from malnutrition and struggled to defend her body against threats both outside the house and within it. And even though she made it out, she has suffered a lifetime of consequences since: excruciating health problems, fear and shame. Especially shame. In We Are Not Okay, Livermore's deeply personal and moving essays explore what it means to grow up poor in America and ask whether it is possible to outrun the shame it grinds into your bones. She excoriates the inhumanity in how the United States treats its poor and asks the nation to confront how growing up poor in America brutalizes us and warps our perspective on ourselves, on other people and on the world. She concludes by suggesting the unthinkable: the dissolution of the United States.

Christian Livermore grew up a shy little girl in a turbulent family sunk in poverty, violence, substance abuse and mental illness. She ate government cheese, suffered from malnutrition and struggled...


Advance Praise

“A moving meditation on American precarity. If, as Baldwin has written, home is an irrevocable condition, We Are Not Okay argues that the same might be said for poverty. Livermore is sensitive, insightful and provocative and her book is not to be missed.”
—Junot Díaz, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

“If you’re born white trash, do you ever stop feeling that’s who and what you are? Christian Livermore’s unadorned reflections on  ‘class-passing’ are real and raw and nervy. In reading this book, you will see what Americans try to ignore: the damage being done by our class system, which distorts everything it touches. We Are Not Okay tells a far more powerful story than J.D. Vance did, in a truly honest voice––which is what’s been missing from most modern memoirs.“
—Nancy Isenberg, author of White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America

We Are Not Okay, is not fiction, nor indulgent biography, but a polemic against the tyranny of deprivation. Livermore viscerally illustrates at a granular level, why the poor stay poor and how choice plays no significant part in this perpetuation.”
—Belinda Roman, PhD, Assistant Professor of Economics at St. Mary’s University

“A moving meditation on American precarity. If, as Baldwin has written, home is an irrevocable condition, We Are Not Okay argues that the same might be said for poverty. Livermore is sensitive...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781951724160
PRICE US$13.99 (USD)

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