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The American Dream of homeownership is becoming an American Delusion. As renters seek an escape from record-breaking rent hikes, first-time buyers find that skyrocketing interest rates and historically low inventory leave them with scant options for an affordable place to live. With home valued more than ever as a commodity, even social housing programs meant to insulate families from cut-throat markets are under threat—sometimes by residents themselves.
In HOMES FOR LIVING, urban planner and oral historian Jonathan Tarleton introduces readers to 2 social housing co-ops in Brooklyn and Manhattan. Longtime residents of St. James Towers and Southbridge Towers lock horns over whether to maintain the rules that have kept their homes affordable for decades or to cash out at great personal profit, thereby denying future generations the same opportunity to build thriving communities rooted in mutual care.
With a deft hand for mapping personal histories atop the greater housing crisis, Tarleton explores housing as a public good, movements for tenant rights and Indigenous sovereignty, and questions of race and class to lay bare competing visions of what ownership means, what homes are for, and what neighbors owe each other.
Jonathan Tarleton is a writer, an urban planner, and an oral historian. He previously served as the chief researcher on NONSTOP METROPOLIS: A NEW YORK CITY ATLAS and as the editor in chief of the online magazine URBAN OMNIBUS. His essays have appeared in ORION, JACOBIN, HELL GATE, DIRT, and BEYOND.
Lawrence Lanahan has worked in radio and print journalism for two decades, including five years producing for WYPR, Baltimore's NPR station. At WYPR, he won a duPont Award for "The Lines Between Us," a year-long multimedia series about inequality. The New Press released Lanahan's first nonfiction book, THE LINES BETWEEN US: TWO FAMILIES AND A QUEST TO CROSS BALTIMORE'S RACIAL DIVIDE in 2019. Lanahan has master's degrees in sociology from American University and in journalism from Columbia University, and he teaches communication at Loyola University of Maryland. He writes songs and performs in Baltimore, sometimes with the bands Glad Pulses and Disappearing Ink. Lanahan lives in Baltimore with his wife and two sons.