Order in-stock items by Friday, December 20 for in-store pickup
Random House Stuck: How the Privileged and the Propertied Broke the Engine of American Opportunity Random House Stuck: How the Privileged and the Propertied Broke the Engine of American Opportunity
Random House Stuck: How the Privileged and the Propertied Broke the Engine of American Opportunity Random House Stuck: How the Privileged and the Propertied Broke the Engine of American Opportunity

Stuck: How the Privileged and the Propertied Broke the Engine of American Opportunity

By Yoni Appelbaum

$32.00

Publication Date: February 25, 2025

+ -
Add to cart
Availability: Usually arrives within 5-10 days (will not arrive by Christmas) Pre-orders ship after the publication date.

How did America cease to be the land of opportunity?

We take it for granted that good neighborhoods—with good schools and good housing—are only accessible to the wealthy. But in America, this wasn’t always the case.

Though for most of world history, your prospects were tied to where you were born, Americans came up with a revolutionary idea: If you didn’t like your lot in life, you could find a better location and reinvent yourself there. Americans moved to new places with unprecedented frequency, and, for two hundred years, that remarkable mobility was the linchpin of American economic and social opportunity.  

In this illuminating debut, Yoni Appelbaum, historian and journalist for The Atlantic, shows us that this idea has been under attack since reformers first developed zoning laws to ghettoize Chinese Americans in nineteenth-century Modesto, California. The century of legal segregation that ensued—from the zoning laws enacted to force Jewish workers back into New York’s Lower East Side to the private-sector discrimination and racist public policy that trapped Black families in Flint, Michigan to Jane Jacobs’ efforts to protect her vision of the West Village—has raised housing prices, deepened political divides, emboldened bigots, and trapped generations of people in poverty. Appelbaum shows us that these problems have a common explanation: people can’t move as readily as they used to. They are, in a word, stuck.

Cutting through more than a century of mythmaking, Stuck tells a vivid, surprising story of the people and ideas that caused our economic and social sclerosis and lays out common-sense ways to get Americans moving again.

About the Author

Yoni Appelbaum is a deputy executive editor of The Atlantic and a social and cultural historian of the United States. Before joining The Atlantic, he was a lecturer on history and literature at Harvard University. He previously taught at Babson College and at Brandeis University, where he received his PhD in American history.

Author Residence: Washington, DC

Author Hometown: Brookline, MA

Format: Hardcover

Length: 320 pages

Publisher: Random House

Publication Date: February 25, 2025

ISBN: 9780593449295

Add to wishlist / Add to compare

Linden Tree Books

Copyright 2024 Linden Tree Books