In Bootstrapped, Alissa Quart takes you on a wild journey to the ideological heart of the self-made myth. The reporting and storytelling here are incredible; my jaw literally dropped several times. But even as Quart tears down ‘the bootstraps’ con through compelling portraits of lived realities, she also builds up a demonstration — at once realistic and utopian — of the many ‘arts of interdependence,’ as she calls them, on which we rely. Ultimately, this book left me with much-needed hope, resolve, and curiosity about all the things we make possible together.” — Jenny Odell, author of How to Do Nothing
“Alissa Quart is a national treasure. Among other things, she's the foremost chronicler of this country’s increasingly downwardly mobile middle class. Bootstrapped is an incisive and alarming reminder that we deserve more than what this country offers. This stirring book exposes what Quart calls the ‘dystopian social safety net,’ showing that the real way to do better is to work together for the common good." — Astra Taylor, author of Democracy May Not Exist, But We'll Miss It When it's Gone
“Quart shreds the myth that white wealth comes from individualism. She also breaks down how this lie is used to exploit America’s poorest workers, creating unprecedented riches for the few. Clear writing and consequential arguments make Bootstrapped an enlightening and informative page turner.” — Sarah Schulman, author of Let The Record Show
“In this illuminating book, Alissa Quart takes on the most powerful idea in America, exploring the mythology that we become rich through solitary hard work. She also offers more fulfilling community-based ideas that can help us actually achieve a good life. A very important read.” — Arlie Hochschild, author of Strangers In Their Own Land
“Quart’s vision of an America where no one needs to put on “codified theatrical performances via social media” to get the help they need is a breath of fresh air. This eloquent and incisive call to action inspires.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“A contrarian rebuttal of the notion that wealthy Americans deserve everything they have and that the “poor are responsible for their own poverty...A provocative, important repudiation of gig-economy capitalism that proposes utopian rather than dystopian solutions.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“As the heir apparent to the late, great Barbara Ehrenreich, Alissa Quart takes on the American myth of the self-made man. She shows us how taking care of our fellow citizens has been largely left to a ragtag network of nonprofits trying to address structural inequality. A must read for understanding our moment and a fierce wake-up call.” — Beth Macy, author of Dopesick
“How maddening is it that one of the central metaphors of the American Dream started as a joke? In this elegant and incisive book, Quart challenges us to see a through line of self creation from Thoreau to Reagan, weaving together stylish analysis and evocative reporting. Quart is a fantastically entertaining literary class warrior.” — Zephyr Teachout, author of Corruption in America
“Alissa Quart reveals how the shortcomings of social policy have affected real people’s real lives. She shows us the ugly truth: the book is so compelling you can’t look away.” — Ray Suarez, author of Latino Americans
"Alissa Quart is an essential chronicler of American inequality, and at a moment when the schism between the wealthy and everyone else seems to be getting wider and deeper by the hour, we need her work more than ever." — Literary Hub
"Bootstrapped asks readers to begin by simply questioning the dominant narrative of the go-it-alone American success story. Recommended for fans of Matthew Desmond’s Evicted (2016), Linda Tirado’s Hand to Mouth (2014), and Barbara Ehrenreich’s Bright-Sided (2009)." — Booklist
"If all Bootstrapped aimed to do was expose the hypocrisy of those who promote the myth of total self-reliance, it would still be a well-written and valuable contribution. But Quart’s book has a larger point to make: there is simply no such thing as true independence within the human condition. Everyone requires some sort of help, whether it’s from mothers who perform unpaid care work and raise children, public infrastructure that allows businesses to function, or employees who sacrifice their time and effort — often for poverty wages — in order to make profits for owners who proudly tout their self-made fortunes." — Jacobin
“Bootstrapped puts words to beliefs that I struggled to articulate as a teen and that haunted me into adulthood…Just as important, Bootstrapped urges readers to rethink their narratives of accomplishment. Quart encourages us to stop shaming others, and ourselves, for needing assistance and to acknowledge the ways we are all interdependent.” — The Atlantic
"In Bootstrapped, the author (Squeezed) and executive director of the Economic Hardship Reporting Project brilliantly debunks the American 'fantasy of self-reliance,' which has been around since the 1830s, when the notions of 'pull yourself up by your bootstraps' and become a 'self-made man' first appeared....her book is a thoughtful, nuanced examination of our 'self-punishing' individualism." — New York Journal of Books
“At a time when many are struggling, Quart digs into the idea of the American Dream and asks how we can truly help one another thrive.” — People
"Quart is committed, both literarily and professionally, to describing how things can be made better. She goes deeply into the myth and the system it has helped to build, but she makes real concrete policy suggestions." — Forward
"Quart's case-studies of organizers and rank-and-file in different movements are prescriptions for systemic changes, while her urgent case for reframing how we think of ourselves and our society present an individual-scale project for all of us." — Cory Doctorow, Pluralistic.net
“[Quart] embodies the ethos [of quality journalism] in her own trenchant cultural criticism and reporting, picking apart American delusions…Perhaps alongside Independence Day, we should make a practice of celebrating 'Interdependence Day,' as Quart proposes in the book’s coda.” — The Nation
“This book offers important insights into how our well-being as citizens is made entirely into our own responsibility. It also shows us alternative communities and methods for survival.” — Teen Vogue
“Reading Bootstrapped is a good reminder of how much we depend on one another. Applying the ideas of this book to an academic context might help us understand the structures that stand in the way of success for everyone within our university communities.” — Inside Higher Ed
“Rich with wit, her storytelling mixes historic and contemporary references and carries on her former friend and colleague Barbara Ehrenreich’s searing analysis of ways the rich exploit the poor.” — The Indypendent
"[Quart] writes about what she calls the 'art of dependence'....Quart’s framework extends far beyond friendship, but I now refer to the concept often myself as a sort of internal checkpoint." — Elle
"Quart’s book shows how people help each other through mutual aid and presents an inspiring alternative to the existing vision of the 'American dream.'" — Current Affairs
"Persuasively reported." — Brown Alumni Magazine
★ 03/13/2023
Journalist and poet Quart (Squeezed) delivers an impassioned and historically grounded argument for more economic and social interdependence in American society. Contending that “pulling oneself up by the bootstraps” has become a near-impossible moral aspiration for many Americans, Quart reveals the unexamined advantages and government assistance behind the self-made myths of public figures including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Horatio Alger, Ayn Rand, Donald Trump, and Elon Musk. Rather than upholding an unreachable ideal of independence and self-reliance that shames people for not achieving success, Quart argues that Americans should become comfortable acknowledging a more realistic state of interdependence, where lives are shaped by the help of parents, teachers, caretakers, and access to opportunity. She buttresses her claims with details about “the rise of small-scale democratic workplaces and novel forms of citizen altruism and activism” during the Covid-19 pandemic and vivid profiles of multiracial city co-ops, grassroots coalitions of activists and medical students performing ad-hoc community services, and a therapist whose work is “informed by social class awareness.” Quart’s vision of an America where no one needs to put on “codified theatrical performances via social media” to get the help they need is a breath of fresh air. This eloquent and incisive call to action inspires. (Mar.)
03/01/2022
Executive director at the Economic Hardship Reporting Project and an Emmy Award-winning journalist whose books include the recent Squeezed, Quart argues that the U.S. laser-sharp fixation on relentlessly, self-reliantly going it alone damages both individuals and society. It hampers initiatives aimed at alleviating hardship and inequality and shifts responsibility to those with the least wherewithal to change their circumstances. With a 75,000-copy first printing.
This incisive broadside against the ubiquitous American narrative that anyone can be successful if they work hard enough could not have found a better narrator than Beth Hicks. The author's writing tone is indignant and unsparing in its takedown of the self-sufficiency myth, a tone that Hicks's performance renders with finesse. Her delivery expresses author Alissa Quart's complaints with the same authority and determination found in her excellent reporting; Hicks never lets her delivery sound shrill or snarky. This well-documented audiobook looks at how culture, the media, and politicians use the romantic ideal of individual determination to shame people who are disadvantaged by systemic obstacles, and to relieve the ruling class from the obligation to level the playing field with robust social programs. T.W. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
This incisive broadside against the ubiquitous American narrative that anyone can be successful if they work hard enough could not have found a better narrator than Beth Hicks. The author's writing tone is indignant and unsparing in its takedown of the self-sufficiency myth, a tone that Hicks's performance renders with finesse. Her delivery expresses author Alissa Quart's complaints with the same authority and determination found in her excellent reporting; Hicks never lets her delivery sound shrill or snarky. This well-documented audiobook looks at how culture, the media, and politicians use the romantic ideal of individual determination to shame people who are disadvantaged by systemic obstacles, and to relieve the ruling class from the obligation to level the playing field with robust social programs. T.W. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
★ 2022-12-20
A contrarian rebuttal of the notion that wealthy Americans deserve everything they have and that the “poor are responsible for their own poverty.”
Building on her previous book, Squeezed: Why Our Families Can’t Afford America, journalist Quart, head of a nonprofit called the Economic Hardship Reporting Project, dissects the notion of bootstrapping, “a shorthand term I am using to describe…every-man-for-themselves individualism.” As the author amply demonstrates, that doctrine of individualism has been a long-standing, deeply ingrained trope in American life. To demonstrate that fact, Quart examines aspirational literary works by writers such as Horatio Alger and Laura Ingalls Wilder, the latter of whom, writes Quart, painted a portrait in her Little House series of rugged self-reliance even as her father “was not such a great farmer and thus leaned on his neighbors for help far more than Wilder tended to admit in her books.” Emerson and even Thoreau are called on the carpet and found wanting, too, before Quart moves on to modern rallying cries such as the mindfulness movement, carefully instilled in corporate culture not to produce generations of Buddhist saints but instead to urge people to become more productive. Within this system, far too many people rely on a “dystopian social safety net” in order to make it from paycheck to paycheck or even to stay alive, whether visiting warming stations to keep from freezing to death in winter or free dental clinics to offset the fact that “fewer than half of American dentists accept Medicaid.” Against these harsh realities, which she reports on cogently and without rancor, Quart proposes a more meaningful safety net of cooperative work and mutual aid, whereby workers pool their capabilities and time to produce needed and sustainable things while being their own bosses—a situation that, she notes, reflects dependence, independence, and interdependence all at once.
A provocative, important repudiation of gig-economy capitalism that proposes utopian rather than dystopian solutions.