
Walked away from houses where more was owed than the house was now worth. You can do everything right, just the way society wants you to do it, and still send up broke, alone, homeless."Ī whole society of seniors, most between Sixty and eighty, who after the recession and housing collapse in 2008, lost everything. "At one time there was a social contract that if you played by the rules (went to school, got a job and worked hard) everything would be fine. Her long-form stories have won a James Aronson Award for Social Justice Journalism and a Deadline Club Award.ģ.5 A month or so ago I read Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City, and now having read this, I have come to the conclusion that I have no idea what is going on I'm my own country.

Magazine, Reuters and, along with The Oregonian and The New York Observer - where she worked as a staff writer - and Fortune Small Business magazine, where she was a senior editor. She has written for publications including Harper's Magazine, The Nation, WIRED, The Washington Post, The Associated Press, The International Herald Tribune, The New York Times Magazine, The Christian Science Monitor, O: The Oprah Magazine, Inc. Jessica has been teaching at Columbia Journalism School since 2008.


The project spanned three years and more than 15,000 miles of driving-from coast to coast and from Mexico to the Canadian border. Norton & Co.), she spent months living in a camper van, documenting itinerant Americans who gave up traditional housing and hit the road full time, enabling them to travel from job to job and carve out a place for themselves in our precarious economy. Jessica Bruder is a journalist who writes about subcultures and resilience.įor her most recent book, "Nomadland: Surviving America in the Twenty-First Century" (W.W.
