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Barbara Kingsolver |
Barbara Kingsolver says she intended her Pulitzer Prize-winning novel
Demon Copperhead to be her "great Appalachian novel" that told the story of how the
opioid epidemic has ravaged the region, and its impact on children.Ezra Klein of
The New York Times interviewed Kingsolver, who grew up in Nicholas County, for his podcast, "The Ezra Klein Show." The Times transcribed the
interview.
It is wide-ranging, but a big chunk has her telling Klein how the
opioid epidemic has impacted a whole generation of children who have
become orphans and are being raised by grandparents and the foster
system — and getting the bulk of their social services at school.
"We
have a generation of orphans coming up through our schools," Kingsolver
said, adding later, "There’s so many more kids in need than there are
social networks to catch them — but the caseworkers are so overloaded
and so pathetically underpaid. . . . This is something that I think the
world needs to know about, this country — voters — need to know about.
We need to know how this epidemic has left a generation of innocents
that nobody’s taking decent care of. . . . These kids have been left
behind. Our burdened public school systems are being asked to raise
these kids."
Klein and Kingsolver also talked about how Central Appalachia was targeted by Purdue Pharma
with a drug that was so addictive and with doctors who were told
otherwise. "This was done to them," Kingsolver said of her neighbors in
southwest Virginia and southeastern Kentucky. "Nobody wants to be
addicted."
Kingsolver also talked about the stigma associated with addiction
and how people have been brainwashed to think it is a moral failing,
instead of the brain disease that it is.
"We have been
trained, culturally trained, to think of addiction in this way, as a
personal failing that needs to be punished. Incarceration does not cure
addiction any more than it cures cancer. Addiction is a disease," she
said. "It’s impossible to describe how terrible this disease is, not
just the dope sickness of it but the fact that your entire life has to
become just a really difficult, hard work in process of, every morning,
getting your means, getting your fix, getting through another day. And
nobody wants to live like that."
Kingsolver told Klein that she
hopes her novel will help people have more compassion and think of
people with addiction as having a disease and to get rid of the idea
that you don't treat a person with addiction until they "hit bottom."
"That’s
how we treat the disease of addiction. And it’s incredibly inhumane.
And effective treatment will only happen after we switch over from
putting this in the hands of the police and the prisons to medical
workers who can meet addicted people where they live and offer them the
first steps of clean needles and fentanyl test strips so that they won’t
die in the weeks that it will take for them logistically, physically,
emotionally, to get to the beginnings of treatment," she said.
And
to those who maintain a moral objection to such "harm reduction"
programs, she said, "It’s as if people feel that addicted people deserve
to die. Imagine if we looked at any other disease that way."
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