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NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • An acclaimed journalist tries to understand how she escaped her small town in Arkansas while her brilliant friend could not, and, in the process, illuminates the unemployment, drug abuse, sexism, and evangelicalism killing poor, rural white women all over America.“[A] clear-eyed and tender debut . . . This book is as much the author’s story as a piece of reportage.”—The Wall Street JournalGrowing up gifted and working-class poor in the foothills of the Ozarks, Monica and Darci became fast friends. The girls bonded over a shared love of reading and learning, even as they navigated the challenges of their tumultuous family lives and declining town—broken marriages, alcohol abuse, and shuttered stores and factories. They pored over the giant map in their middle-school classroom, tracing their fingers over the world that awaited them, vowing to escape. In the end, Monica left Clinton for college and fulfilled her dreams, but Darci, along with many in their circle of friends, did not.Years later, working as a journalist covering poverty, Potts discovered what she already intuitively knew about the women in Arkansas: Their life expectancy had dropped steeply—the sharpest such fall in a century. This decline has been attributed to “deaths of despair”—suicide, alcoholism, and drug overdoses—but Potts knew their causes were too complex to identify in a sociological study. She had grown up with these women, and when she saw Darci again, she found that her childhood friend—addicted to drugs, often homeless, a single mother—was now on track to becoming a statistic.In this gripping narrative, Potts deftly pinpoints the choices that sent her and Darci on such different paths and then widens the lens to explain why those choices are so limited. The Forgotten Girls is a profound, compassionate look at a population in trouble, and a uniquely personal account of the way larger forces, such as inheritance, education, religion, and politics, shape individual lives.
This book is a thought-provoking, must-read for anyone who wants to understand how we in the US fail those who struggle to get by in places like Clinton, Arkansas. It's also a story of hope, for we keep rooting for Darci and others like her, despite their many missteps and misfortunes. And we see how the author has managed to hack her way through a thicket of difficulties and pain to realize her potential.Monica Potts tells a deeply personal, sympathetic story that is born of her experience and her love of her friend. But Ms. Potts also skillfully weaves in relevant research and analysis as she illuminates how a host of external circumstances keeps her friend down. So, we come to see gradually how this particular story is not unique and how it sits within much larger social and political frames.I don't read many books in one or two sittings, but it was hard for me to put this one down. The writing is vivid and fluid, and it just keeps moving the reader along. The Forgotten Girls is honest and deep, and it resists easy characterizations of people and place.