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Vance’s ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ popular at libraries, Amazon

By Kimberly Aguirre, Los Angeles Times
Published: July 20, 2024, 6:04am

While JD Vance jumped into the national spotlight when former President Donald Trump announced him on Monday as his running mate, he first rose to fame as the bestselling author of 2016’s “Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis.”

Now, Americans hoping to learn more about the vice presidential candidate are turning to his book — and its Netflix movie adaptation — to get a peek at his upbringing.

According to data tracking firm Luminate, U.S. viewership for the film grew by more than 1,180 percent on Netflix. The movie was watched for 19.2 million minutes on Monday, the day of Trump’s announcement, compared with 1.5 million minutes on Sunday, per Luminate.

The drama earned a spot on Netflix’s daily top 10 list. It is the streaming giant’s fourth-most-streamed movie in the U.S. as of Wednesday — rising from sixth on Tuesday.

Netflix publishes its weekly top 10 list on Tuesdays, so the Ron Howard-directed movie’s spike will count toward next week’s edition.

The paperback and hardcover versions of the 2016 memoir now occupy the top two spots on the Amazon bestsellers list.

Libraries are also seeing increased demand for the book. A representative for audiobook and e-book lending app Libby — which is available in more than 90 percent of public libraries in North America — told The Times there was a more than 900 percent increase in checkouts of the title. To meet the demand, library purchases from Libby have increased 100 times.

In the book, the Ohio senator writes about growing up in a blue-collar family in Middletown with a long history of poverty. Vance also chronicles his experiences in the Marine Corps and at Yale Law School. The memoir serves as a critique of the country’s treatment of white blue-collar workers — the “hillbillies” of the “elegy.”

“Why are people like me so poorly represented in America’s elite institutions?” he writes.

The memoir received mixed reactions at the time of publication. For some, Vance shed light on a community often overlooked.

“Vance’s unapologetic autobiography … is a poem to the hills and hollers of his childhood where a blue-collar sentiment often blames government and big business for poverty, addiction, violence and families in disarray,” reads The Times’ 2016 review of the memoir.

Others criticized Vance for his generalizations, with the New Republic calling the onetime fierce critic of Trump a “false prophet of blue America.”

Following Monday’s vice president announcement, a Times opinion column condemned the memoir, noting that Vance’s writing generalized 35 percent of the country “as tragic victims of alcoholism, drug abuse, laziness and their own self-destructive moral failings,” which in turn caused the news media to further isolate and generalize the white working class.

Despite controversy, with the book’s commercial success came a Netflix film adaptation. The movie starred Gabriel Basso as Vance; Amy Adams as his mother, Beverly; and Glenn Close as Mamaw — his grandmother. The movie snagged two Academy Award nominations in 2021, including supporting actress for Close.

The Times’ 2020 review described the Netflix pic as “woefully misguided.”

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