
Money in the Mountains
The Cultural Trauma of Appalachia
Rayelle Davis(Author)
Pluto Press
Will be published approx. on 20. June 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
160 pages
978-0-7453-5215-2 (ISBN)
Description
The United States is in a state of decline-a reality decades in the making. At the thin end of the wedge sits Appalachia, one of the nation's most deprived regions, mythologized by outsiders and misunderstood the world over.
Embedded as a therapist within this community, Rayelle Davis frames the addiction, suicide, and "diseases of despair" that plague the region as a consequence of cultural trauma, exploitation, and systemic neglect. Her work is a searing exploration of generational adversity and a powerful indictment of the psychological abuse of the American Dream.
Davis reveals a profound truth: Appalachian trauma is colonial trauma. As in exploited nations abroad, everything of value-from wealth and health to life itself-is extracted by a distant elite. This courageous book exposes the predatory systems of power and challenges everything we think we know about identity, sovereignty, and the actual cost of inequality in America.
In a time of extreme political polarization, Money in the Mountains is not a requiem for Appalachia, but a manifesto for collective healing.
Embedded as a therapist within this community, Rayelle Davis frames the addiction, suicide, and "diseases of despair" that plague the region as a consequence of cultural trauma, exploitation, and systemic neglect. Her work is a searing exploration of generational adversity and a powerful indictment of the psychological abuse of the American Dream.
Davis reveals a profound truth: Appalachian trauma is colonial trauma. As in exploited nations abroad, everything of value-from wealth and health to life itself-is extracted by a distant elite. This courageous book exposes the predatory systems of power and challenges everything we think we know about identity, sovereignty, and the actual cost of inequality in America.
In a time of extreme political polarization, Money in the Mountains is not a requiem for Appalachia, but a manifesto for collective healing.
Reviews / Votes
'A brave book, at a time that demands bravery in the face of a sink-or-swim systemic ethos. Davis certainly contributes to the trauma literature with her expose of the unique characteristics of Appalachian trauma, but moving far beyond explicit trauma, she helps us to see Appalachia as "the warning sign of a broken system." Every page gave me chills. This is a must-read book for the times in which we are living' -- Lisa Lopez Levers, Professor Emerita, Department of Educational Foundations and Leadership, Duquesne University, editor of <i>Trauma Counseling</i>More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Product notice
Paperback (UK-trade)
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 20 mm
Weight
172 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-7453-5215-2 (9780745352152)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Rayelle Davis is a licensed therapist specialising in generational trauma in rural working-class communities. She started working as a counsellor in 2016, witnessing the personal stories behind the opioid epidemic, and has gone on to run her own private practice. She is currently working towards her doctoral degree in Counsellor Education and Supervision at Duquesne University. She lives in western Maryland.
Content
Introduction
1. Appalachia
2. The Busy Town of Cumberland
3. Coal
4. Therapy and the System
5. Trauma Work
6. Charlie
7. Academia
8. Mike
9. The Clinic Debate
10. Caroline
11. Therapist's Point of View
12. The Pandemic and Telehealth
13. Jason
14. Marcy
15. Social Media and Shifting Culture
16. America the Narcissist
17. Shame
18. Toxic Individualism
19. Healing
References
1. Appalachia
2. The Busy Town of Cumberland
3. Coal
4. Therapy and the System
5. Trauma Work
6. Charlie
7. Academia
8. Mike
9. The Clinic Debate
10. Caroline
11. Therapist's Point of View
12. The Pandemic and Telehealth
13. Jason
14. Marcy
15. Social Media and Shifting Culture
16. America the Narcissist
17. Shame
18. Toxic Individualism
19. Healing
References