New Books Network

Sarah Smarsh, "Bone of the Bone: Essays on America from a Daughter of the Working Class" (Scribner, 2024)

Oct 25, 2025
Sarah Smarsh, a National Book Award finalist and journalist, dives into her journey as a voice for the rural working class. She discusses the evolution of class discourse, revealing that while awareness has increased, many analyses remain superficial. Smarsh shares her struggles with publishing and how her viral essays reshaped her career. The conversation touches on her dual identity as a Kansas farm kid and a prominent writer, as well as her upcoming work on the endangered tallgrass prairie.
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INSIGHT

Persistence Before Recognition

  • Sarah Smarsh persisted writing about class for decades despite repeated rejections from U.S. outlets and low pay.
  • Her work found audiences when the public discourse slowly opened to class as a topic.
INSIGHT

Class Talk Without Class Understanding

  • Class entered U.S. discourse but is often discussed poorly by privileged pundits and journalists.
  • Sarah argues most analysts have class blind spots that misread political movements and working-class life.
ANECDOTE

FAFSA Story Went National

  • Sarah wrote a FAFSA exposé as an undergraduate that hit the AP wire and ran nationwide.
  • That early reporting showed how her lived class experience revealed overlooked policy blind spots.
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