Review by Booklist Review
Owsley County is the poorest county in the state of Kentucky, and second poorest in the entire U.S. But it is here, in this small, stagnant, but proud Appalachian holler, where Chambers and her beloved kinfolk have grown up and lived for generations. In this poignant, fascinating, and heartwarming memoir, Chambers pays tribute to her granny, mother, and aunt, the ""Hill Women"" whose strength and passion propelled Chambers to earn two Ivy League degrees. While Chambers goes into detail on the inaccuracy of the brand hillbilly, she also points out that her hill people are strong, creative, hardworking, and ""more complex than the outside world believed."" She admittedly struggles with how to portray both parts of Owsley: the extreme staggering poverty and lack of healthcare residents experience versus the hardworking grit, hope, and spark of people who don't ever give up. Indeed, with Chambers' focus on the three women who deeply affected her, it is little wonder she's returned to Kentucky as an adult to provide free legal services and to help women like them.--Cassandra Smith Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Women in Kentucky's Appalachian community come into focus in lawyer Chambers's powerful debut memoir, which aims to put a human face on a stereotyped region. Kentucky native Chambers spent much of her youth in impoverished Owsley County, where her sharecropper grandparents maintained a tobacco farm. Chambers highlights three women who exemplify Appalachian strength: her scrappy grandmother (whose "joy hid the poverty"); her resilient aunt, who sacrificed personal ambition to help run the farm; and her trailblazing mother, who became the first person in the family to graduate from college. Chambers credits them with supporting her as she forged her own path, which included attending Yale and Harvard Law School. Upon graduation, Chambers moved back to Kentucky to provide legal assistance to the poor. She recounts her work on behalf of low-income women, including helping domestic violence victims, and touches on her role as vice-chair for the state Democratic Party. Chambers acknowledges Appalachia's problems, such as water pollution and the drug epidemic, but these sections--sporadically interspersed throughout the book-- only skim the surface of Appalachia's issues. Still, this is a passionate memoir, one that honors Appalachia's residents, especially its women. (Jan.)
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Review by Library Journal Review
Chambers's debut is first and foremost a family memoir that chronicles her personal journey from her home in Appalachia to the Ivy League and back again, while highlighting the women in her life who provided inspiration. Chambers's mother, Wilma, had an indomitable will that helped her become the first in her family to graduate from college. The author's grandmother and Aunt Ruth, both of whom remained in Owsley County, KY, raising families, running the farm, and helping neighbors survive, are also a focus. These women were role models who encouraged Chambers to recognize the importance of education; she would later go on to earn degrees from Yale and Harvard Law School. After graduation, Chambers returned to Kentucky to work in legal services. She describes the many pitfalls in the system for those living in poverty as well as the persistent problems facing the region, including unemployment, water pollution from mining, and the opioid epidemic. VERDICT A passionate, hopeful vision of the women of Appalachia and the many individuals and families who depend on their support and willingness to give back to others.--Theresa Muraski, Univ. of Wisconsin-Stevens Point Lib.
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
A family memoir that celebrates the inspiration of strong women within a rural culture most often characterized as patriarchal.Chambers, a member of the Democratic National Committee, knows how fortunate she was to experience the world beyond her Appalachian home in Kentucky and, especially, to graduate from Yale and Harvard Law. Yet she could not have done so without the examples of her mother, the first in her family to graduate from high school as well as college, and her grandmother. "I don't have enough ways to honor them, these women of the Appalachian hills," she writes. "Women who built a support system for me and the others. The best way I know is to tell their stories." Chambers provides information about Appalachia in general, including the poverty and lack of resources, the collapse of the coal and tobacco industries, and the drug epidemics that have decimated the region. There are also stories that illuminate the hardworking spirit and flashes of hope among the populace, the women in particular. People in these communities supported each other because they knew that no one else would; "generosity was both an insurance policy and a deeply held value." But the primary story is personal, as the author chronicles how she left home to discover a world of privilege amid the privileged. After graduating from Yale, she had "figured out the system, the code, the secret password into this world that had seemed so mysterious for so long.Butas I fit in more at Yale, I fit in less in the mountains. I didn't know how to be both of these people at the same time." The various narrative strands come together as Chambers returns home to provide legal aid to those who can't afford it. She relates the stories of women battling poverty, domestic violence, drug habits, and other ills that run rampant throughout the region. Ultimately, it was home in Kentucky that she found her purpose, identity, and voice.A welcome addition to the expanding literature about coming-of-age in Appalachia. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.