Janesville: An American Story
Janesville: An American Story book cover

Janesville: An American Story

Paperback – January 2, 2018

Price
$10.09
Format
Paperback
Pages
384
Publisher
Simon & Schuster
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1501102264
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.96 x 8.38 inches
Weight
10.5 ounces

Description

“The most illuminating business book of the year.... If you really want to understand what’s going on in today’s real economy — beyond the headlines about new stock-market highs, tax policy or the latest list of billionaires — spend some time with this true tale.” —Andrew Ross Sorkin, The New York Times “ Janesville is haunting in part because it’s a success story....xa0One is awed by the dignity and levelheadedness of its protagonists, who seem to represent the best of America.... Goldstein is a talented storyteller, and we root for her characters as, moment by moment, they try their hardest.” — The New Yorker “A superb feat of reportage, Janesville combines a heart-rending account of the implications of the closing on GM workers and their families with a sobering analysis of the response of the public and private sectors. The book is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand the economy of the Rust Belt — and its implications for America’s once-proud middle class.” — The Philadelphia Inquirer “We’ve been hearing a lot since the November 2016 election about the press missing The Story of a middle class losing ground, hope, and heart. But it turns out that Amy Goldstein, one of our finest reporters, was on it all along. Her vivid portrait of a quintessential American town in distress affirms Eudora Welty’s claim that 'one place understood helps us understand all places better.'” —Diane McWhorter, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Carry Me Home “Ms. Goldstein’s book takes its place alongside those other essential tomes of the Trump era, J.D. Vance’s Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis and Joan Williams’ White Working Class: Overcoming Class Cluelessness in America .” — Financial Times “Energetically reported and sympathetically narrated.... The story of ordinary people, how they cope or don’t cope with a largely, though not entirely, unexpected economic disaster.” — The Wall Street Journal “Goldstein gives the reader a gripping account of the GM layoff, the real loss it caused and the victims’ heroic resilience in adapting to that loss. By the end of this moving book, I wanted her to write a sequel on what might have been done to prevent the damage in the first place.” — The Washington Post “Reflecting on the state of the white working class, J.D. Vance’s Hillbilly Elegy focuses on cultural decay and the individual, whereas Amy Goldstein’s Janesville emphasizes economic collapse and the community.xa0 To understand how we have gotten to America’s current malaise, both are essential reading.” —Robert D. Putnam, New York Times bestselling author of Bowling Alone and Our Kids “Goldstein provides a welcome addition to the conversation on the broken social contract. Janesville is a town like countless others, and this book offers a useful cautionary tale for public officials, sociologists, economists, and engaged citizens alike.” — The Boston Globe “ Janesville is as relevant to the moment as a breaking news bulletin. It should be required reading for anyone who wants to understand how the Great Recession and deindustrialization have disrupted social, economic and political life in the American heartland. If you want to know why 2016 happened, read this book.” —E.J. Dionne, New York Times bestselling author of Why the Right Went Wrong “The 2008 financial crisis is frequently reduced to a matter of statistics and graphs, which makes Goldstein’s extensive reporting so valuable and, at times, moving.... By emphasizing the effects of economic collapse on family life, Goldstein’s narrative doubles as a sort of generational saga: It humanizes the worst economic crisis of contemporary times by chronicling the enormous pressures it placed on several generations ofxa0Janesville residents.” — The Nation “Fair-minded and empathetic.... While it highlights many moments of resilience and acts of compassion, Amy Goldstein’s Janesville: An American Story also has a tragic feel. It depicts the noble striving of men and women against overpowering forces — in this case, economic ones.” — Milwaukee Journal Sentinel “Amy Goldstein was in the right place at the right time to help us understand why we no longer ‘just get along.’ Having immersed herself in Paul Ryan’s idyllic hometown after its GM plant closed forever, she illuminates disrupted lives, marriages, and childhoods as the manufacturing and strong unions that built our modern middle class fade—fracturing the community and breeding the political polarization that helped give rise to Donald Trump.” —Sheldon Danziger, President of the Russell Sage Foundation and coauthor of America Unequal “Meticulously reported and researched... filled with startling—and disturbing—facts and figures.” — The Denver Post “[Goldstein] shatters a lot of conventional wisdom.” — Minneapolis Star Tribune “Based on three years of probing interviews, Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post journalist Goldstein makes her literary debut with an engrossing investigation.... A simultaneously enlightening and disturbing look at working-class lives in America's heartland.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “Goldstein's exhaustive, evenhanded study of the plight of America's working class through the lens of one emblematic community is deeply humane and deeply disturbing, timely and essential.” — Library Journal (starred review) “Eminently accessible, instantly absorbable, Janesville is a story of economics lived.” — The Keen Thinker (800-CEO-READS newsletter) Amy Goldstein has been a staff writer for thirty years at The Washington Post , where much of her work has focused on social policy. Among her awards, she shared the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for national reporting. She has been a fellow at Harvard University at the Nieman Foundation for Journalism and the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Janesville: An American Story is her first book. She lives in Washington, DC. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Janesville Read more

Features & Highlights

  • *
  • Financial Times
  • and McKinsey Business Book of the Year *
  • Winner of the J. Anthony Lukas Book Prize​ *
  • 800-CEO-READ Business Book of the Year
  • * A
  • New York Times
  • Notable Book
  • * A
  • Washington Post
  • Notable Book * An NPR Best Book of 2017 * A
  • Wall Street Journal
  • Best Book of 2017 * An
  • Economist
  • Best Book of 2017 * A
  • Business Insider
  • Best Book of 2017 *
  • “A gripping story of psychological defeat and resilience” (Bob Woodward,
  • The Washington Post
  • )—an intimate account of the fallout from the closing of a General Motors assembly plant in Janesville, Wisconsin, and a larger story of the hollowing of the American middle class.
  • This is the story of what happens to an industrial town in the American heartland when its main factory shuts down—but it’s not the familiar tale. Most observers record the immediate shock of vanished jobs, but few stay around long enough to notice what happens next when a community with a can-do spirit tries to pick itself up. Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter Amy Goldstein spent years immersed in Janesville, Wisconsin, where the nation’s oldest operating General Motors assembly plant shut down in the midst of the Great Recession. Now, with intelligence, sympathy, and insight into what connects and divides people in an era of economic upheaval, Goldstein shows the consequences of one of America’s biggest political issues. Her reporting takes the reader deep into the lives of autoworkers, educators, bankers, politicians, and job re-trainers to show why it’s so hard in the twenty-first century to recreate a healthy, prosperous working class. “Moving and magnificently well-researched...
  • Janesville
  • joins a growing family of books about the evisceration of the working class in the United States. What sets it apart is the sophistication of its storytelling and analysis” (Jennifer Senior,
  • The
  • New York Times
  • ). “Anyone tempted to generalize about the American working class ought to meet the people in
  • Janesville
  • . The reporting behind this book is extraordinary and the story—a stark, heartbreaking reminder that political ideologies have real consequences—is told with rare sympathy and insight” (Tracy Kidder, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of
  • The Soul of a New Machine
  • ).

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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7%
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23%
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Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

The story the statistics can't tell you

I work in Finance and as I’m reviewing “Janesville” this Friday, January 5, 2018, it happens to be Nonfarm Payrolls day, the day of the month when most pundits on CNBC and Bloomberg TV have ritually argued for quite some time now that the Fed’s low interest rates have led the economy to full employment, while others have begun to agitate for hikes, for the QE-related bond purchases to be reversed etc.

And from 40,000 feet the picture seems to be quite clear: even if things are far from perfect, the storm that started some ten years ago has very clearly abated. From 10% unemployment in October of 2009, the number today was at 4.1%. From 25.2 weeks in June 2010, the median unemployment duration has fallen to 9.1 weeks. From over 15.3 million unemployed in April 2010, the number today was under 6.6 million.

Conversely, of course, and this is again a view from 40,000 feet, the actual employment rate is stuck at a stubbornly low 60.1%, which is marginally better than the 58.2% minimum it hit in July 2012 (or its 58.3% as recently as October 2013), not to mention that in January 2007 it had been at a lofty 63.4%.

The reason is that things are different: the labor participation rate remains a truly abysmal 62.7%, versus 66.3% in January of 2007 and has barely budged from its low of 62.4% in September of 2015, all while, or perhaps even because, pay (hourly and otherwise) is stuck in the doldrums.

What is one to make of it all?

You could do a lot worse than abandon your bird’s eye view and land on Janesville, Wisconsin, the hometown of 2012 vice-presidential candidate and current #2 in succession to Donald Trump, speaker Paul Ryan, a city of 60k that for at least a century was synonymous with American manufacturing.

Janesville not only was the home of the Parker pen, it was also a manufacturing hub for General Motors, who bought a local businessman’s truck business in the early 20th century and carried on making SUVs in Janesville all the way up to 2008, attracting in the process a large number of suppliers, such as Lear.

Janesville is also an important city in the history of labor relations in America. A star of the progressive era, Wisconsin pioneered laws that in the thirties FDR enacted for the entire nation, while Janesville in particular was famous both for the local strength of the UAW, but also for its effectiveness in mediating good relations with GM, preventing violence and organizing charity across town.

In this brilliantly conceived, masterfully told, but also very tough book, author Amy Goldstein recounts the story of three Janesville families that were struck by unemployment as Parker Pen, GM and Lear all shut shop in the 2008 crash, their travails in seeking alternative employment and their efforts to keep their families and their lives together.

She also takes a pragmatic look at the efforts expended by all the members of the community who sought to assist them, from the director of the job center who gave it all to help, to the compassionate teachers who kept their kids’ spirits up, to the union leaders and the leaders of the business community who refused to give up, all the way up to the local and federal-level politicians.

You read this book, and the BLS statistics truly come alive, they acquire names and feelings and habits and aspirations.

Don’t read “Janesville” if you’re down, you have been warned. But if you’ve got the stomach for it, it’s now the book I’d recommend you read about the “Great Recession” and I’ve read many good books about the struggles of common people in the last decade, including “Bad Paper,” “Chain of Title,” “The Unbanking of America” and “Hand to Mouth.”

I enjoyed all of them, but “Janesville” hit me hardest and probably taught me the most too.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

"An American Story"--More so than we may want to acknowledge!

The book about the closing of the GM plant in Janesville, WI is truly an account of the sad disruption of thousands of lives and an industry that supported a thriving middle class. Brought on by the Great Recession of 2007, the general collapse of the American auto industry, and the end of production of the gas-guzzling Tahoe in Janesville because of declining sales, the bottom fell out. The decision was made to stop production and to close the Janesville Assembly Plant. This was the beginning in Janesville and surrounding areas of long-term suffering beyond what anyone would have imagined possible at the time. This time there would be no reopening of the plant, as had occurred in the past.

Amy Goldstein captures the human side of the story well; her narratives of the individuals and families are sensitive and eye-opening. She also captures well the economics of the situation, the ripple affect in other industries which supplied the auto plant and/or the workers,and how older workers especially will likely never recover income levels that they once had. New jobs, when they are found--even after vocational and professional training, for the most part do not pay as much as the old, especially for older workers. Some survivors, the Janesville Gypsies, who travel hours each week to distant locations to continue to work for GM for the high wages and the promised pensions, live apart from their families during the week. Extensive disruption of life abounds.

The story goes beyond Janesville. There is a cautionary tale here for (young) people today, a point made by Thomas L. Friedman in his book "Thank You for Being Late," that everyone has to make his or her own future through study, hard work, and building connections. You have to take seriously and actively your preparation for life and your livelihood, looking for the signs of the times to prepare yourself for something unexpected. Nothing is "guaranteed" anymore.

The chapters in the book are short and easy to read, engaging even--though the story is somewhat depressing. The appendices, especially #2 on "Job-Training Analysis," are quite informative. There are now two Janesvilles--one of those who lost their jobs; one of those who didn't.

The lessons told here can help the reader reflect on other similar situations of factory closings. For example, the book helped me better understand the disruption in my own hometown of Port Allegany, PA where the Pittsburgh-Corning glass factory closed on June 30, 2016 after 80+ years. My father helped build the factory in the 1930s and worked there his whole life, leaving only during WWII, thankful for the job. Although the town never had a "Golden Age," the "Bronze Age" was likely in the 1950s supported by two glass factories. Those days will likely not return again.

This book was a birthday gift from my son Joe. A good choice. Thank you, Joe.
2 people found this helpful
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You have to plod to get through this.

Actually a depressing book... thought provoking... drives home the reality of poverty and how “comfortable and sloppy” one can get when you work for big companies with all the benefits.. been there, done that and had to “adjust” lifestyle before. Work nights at a job I hated to pay the rent. Money does not bring happiness but loss of money can sure bring tension until you “adjust”
1 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

When the Largest Company in Town Closes, the Hole is Bigger than an Empty Building

It was a town that was centered around one large production plant supported by other companies that supplied it, then one day the plant closed, and the town changed. Janesville: An American Story by Amy Goldstein shows how the closing of a General Motors assembly plant affected one small Wisconsin town over five years as those laid off, their families, and others in the community.

Goldstein followed three families affected by the closing of the GM plant either directly or a supplier leaving town once the plant was gone as well as various individuals in the town including the town’s most famous resident, former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan. Over the course of almost 300 pages people must deal with finding a new job whether they went back to school to retain or not, some must make decisions on if they want to continue to work for GM but states away and if so to commute or leave Janesville, children learn to help out their parents with multiple jobs with the unintended consequence of reducing state aid available to the family because policy changes and budget cuts by the new governor because their household income is too high, and a once close knit community is divided between the haves and have nots. As with all things dealing with real life, it’s not pretty, especially as everyone written about must deal with the emotional and mental affects of dealing with something they’d never thought about before.

Janesville: An American Story is a look at one section of the Midwest Rust Belt that have been devastated by economic factors out of their control and how a town tried to respond. Amy Goldstein is an excellent job showing a cross-section of the affected community and how they dealt with the fallout of a town’s largest employer closing.
✓ Verified Purchase

How a small city deals with the effects of a major plant closing.

My home state is Wisconsin, and although I have lived thirty of my years in Chicagoland, I am very familiar with Janesville. When I saw this book, I had to read it. I came from a similar environment. I lived in Eau Claire, Wisconsin and my dad, along with myself and several uncles worked in the Uniroyal-Goodrich Tire Complany. This plant was built in 1917, but closed in the 1990s. Three thousand people were affected by this closure. I moved to Chicagoland. In regards to the Janesville situation, the same thing happened. People who worked 10 to 20 years in that factory could not go elsewhere. Their lives evaporated, just like they did in Eau Claire. Some took jobs in Alabama and Indiana, and did some commuting, but it was a tough existence.

This story mirrors my own life. What happens after your hometown employer decides to pick up and leave. They leave a town that is broken with many fractures. This is a very interesting story about life in America,
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Held my attention, but details were wrong

I worked at both Lear Seating and GM, and I know many of the people who were featured in the book. The author got many of the GM details wrong, and I could not overlook them. Janesville would like everyone to believe that it is thriving, but a community of 63,000 which loses over 2,500 jobs that paid over $20 an hour does not just bounce back. I’ve yet to find - after going back to college and earning another degree - a job in Janesville that pays anything close to that. It makes me wish I had left, too.
✓ Verified Purchase

Excellent look at a community coping with the loss of manufacturing jobs

There are other books that analyze the macro economic and political forces that hollowed out the manufacturing base in this country. In Janesville, the author does an excellent job personalizing the devastating consequences of those forces. When the GM factory packs up and leaves taking middle class labor rates with them, families and organizations across the community are left to struggle in their efforts to recover and accept a new version of the American Dream. Despite the resiliency and creativity of Janseville’s residents, it’s not a pretty picture of what is happening in blue collar communities. Well written and engaging.
✓ Verified Purchase

Nicely written.

Very factual and chronologically correct. Nicely written.
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Well researched

Great read!
✓ Verified Purchase

Five Stars

Good read. Can happen anywhere in small town America & shows what a dedicated group/town can do.