Penna Dexter is your host today, and her first guest is Lisa Bevere sought-after international speaker, bestselling author, and the co-host of The Messenger television program. She discusses her book, Without Rival: Embrace Your Identity and Purpose in an Age of Confusion and Comparison.
In the second hour we hear from author, J.D. Vance. He discusses his book, Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis.
In Without Rival, bestselling author Lisa Bevere shares how a revelation of God's love breaks these limits. You'll learn how to stop seeing others as rivals and make the deep connections with your Creator you long for--connections that hold the promise of true identity and intimacy.
Hillbilly Elegy is a passionate and personal analysis of a culture in crisis—that of white working-class Americans. The decline of this group, a demographic of our country that has been slowly disintegrating over forty years, has been reported on with growing frequency and alarm, but has never before been written about as searingly from the inside. J. D. Vance tells the true story of what a social, regional, and class decline feels like when you were born with it hung around your neck.
The Vance family story begins hopefully in postwar America. J. D.’s grandparents were “dirt poor and in love,” and moved north from Kentucky’s Appalachia region to Ohio in the hopes of escaping the dreadful poverty around them. They raised a middle-class family, and eventually their grandchild (the author) would graduate from Yale Law School, a conventional marker of their success in achieving generational upward mobility.
This interview I just did with Vance in two parts (the final question I asked after Trump’s convention speech) shows why.
That probably is what is behind the shifts that were formally announced in a release the Trump team emailed at 5:38 a.m. Wednesday, hours after the Wall Street Journal first reported the news. Coming 82 days before the general election, the staff changes had the distinct bouquet of desperation rather than the kind of routine and orderly “expansion” that the candidate and his senior advisers were saying.
His answer was both self-serving and true: “You have to want it more than life itself,” Kerrey said without hesitation.
It was obviously a question he had thought about a lot, and it’s one that Donald Trump now faces. How much does he want to win? Is there a limit, in money, discipline and humility, beyond which he refuses to go?