“There are lots of things we consider public goods and fund accordingly: K-12 education, Social Security, clean water, parks, libraries, roads and highways, and other infrastructure. How have we allowed something as fundamental as shelter to be excluded from this list?” (p. 434)
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There is No Place for Us by Brian Goldstone takes very sad look at the life of a forgotten stratum of American life, that is people who are homeless but who have makeshift arrangements for living that result in their exclusion from the homeless statistics. He looks at several families, while providing more general insights about policies and misfortunes that determine their situations.
Here is the author’s description of a street in Atlanta typical of the environment where the muliple histories of homeless workers takes place — “block after block of dialysis clinics, liquor stores, pawnshops, payday lenders, hair-braiding salons, plasma donation centers, twenty-four-hour daycares, storefront churches, and ramshackle motels.” (p 64)
The book takes a close look at the lives of several families in Atlanta, Georgia, over a period of around a decade, and it’s full of really interesting (and very depressing) examples of how they cope with working, taking care of their children, trying to find various types of government or charitable assistance, and many other ways they manage their lives. The bigger picture:
“A more recent analysis by the Southern Poverty Law Center estimates that between thirty thousand and forty-seven thousand people are now living in metro Atlanta’s budget extended-stay hotels, charged rates that are often double what an apartment downthe street would cost. ‘It’s a reinforcing cycle,’ argues Michelle Dempsky, a Legal Aid attorney who litigates on behalf of extended-stay residents. ‘If you’re in emergency need, you’re paying a premium for necessity, which puts you in more financial distress, which makes you less able to secure housing, which means you’re stuck there.’” (p. 300)
The New York Times review described this book when it was published last spring:
“‘There Is No Place for Us’ is a moving book. It is also appropriately enraging. Incremental remedies, Goldstone argues, have only worsened a problem that stems from the assumption that housing is ultimately a commodity, ‘and that the few who own it will invariably profit at the expense of the many who need it.’”
In The Guardian This Week
A very closely related article about the practices at Dollar General and Family Dollar stores describes another way that similar families (with or without housing) are being taken advantage of. These supposedly lower-priced stores are often the only option for poor families very much llike those I’ve just been reading about. A quote that resonates with the sad histories of the people in the book:
Review © 2025 mae sander


The homeless situation is complex, seeming to take advantage of those just trying to make it. It is a sad situation in a country that proclaims so many riches. This book should be a must read for everyone. Thank you for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteIt sounds very discouraging; I hope the author offered some suggestions for solutions or at least improvement?
ReplyDeleteThis book sounds depressing but then it is depressing that so many people end up homeless for various reasons. And even some of the other things we take for granted like public education are seeming like there are people wanting to get rid of them. It's a scary time to be an American. hugs-Erika
ReplyDeleteThere is no reason for anyone in the US to be unhoused. How did we become a nation that doesn't feel the need to take care of it's own?!
ReplyDeleteBrian Goldstone was one of about two dozen authors who were not able to speak at the Texas Book Festival this year because of the government shutdown and flight cancellations. I was very disappointed.
ReplyDeleteI still hope to read his book.
Our current government does not care about the homeless, it is a sad situation. Great book review, thanks for sharing. Take care, have a great day and a happy weekend.
ReplyDeleteIt is an awful cycle. People just need a hand up. They deserve dignity and respect. We have a social safety net in Canada, but in this economy...
ReplyDeleteThe basics are always the same but the environment is different. There used to be a time when communities stepped up to fill the gaps. We could all do what bit we can, like donating extra socks, batteries or teeth brushing kits to organizations that distribute items to the homeless. I tuck in a small book too.
ReplyDeleteThe price of housing in my area is very close to unaffordable, and in northern Virginia, an hour away, places are so high that only people making six figures or more can find housing. People wind up commuting long distances, and then spend a huge chunk of their budget on commuting expenses. It’s not sustainable.
ReplyDelete