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ISBN: 0060595841
Pub: HarperCollins, 2006
Pages: 256
Critical Praise for
The Price of Privilege
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REVIEWS
Atlantic Monthly
by Sandra Tsing Loh
October 2006
The frenzy of academic competition, particularly
among affluent American families, has triggered a spate of cautionary
new books. The titles reviewed here are all excellent: I give them
all A+sor, in the parlance of todays elite high
schoolers, weighted GPAs of 4.687, including 5s in fifteen
AP courses and a combined math/verbal SAT score of 1540.
Of course, Im a biased reader; in my estimation, there cant
be enough books written on the topic. I say, lets hurl them,
one by one, at todays frenzied helicopter parents,
who deserve to be, if not bombarded, at least given a simple clonk
over the head with a frying pan while a trained therapist yells,
Stop the insanity!
Read
the entire review here. (Subscription required for access.)
Library Journal
The phrase poor little rich kid is generally uttered
with disdain by those who've had to struggle in life about those
with more material and social advantages who nonetheless often manage
to be miserable. Levine, a practicing clinical psychologist with
20 years of experience treating troubled children and adolescents,
makes the case that our society cannot afford to trivialize the
"mental health crisis" among the children of the affluent.
In her private practice, she has encountered many children and teens
from wealthy backgrounds who have no conception of self and as a
result feel empty. Writing with clarity and understanding of the
culture of affluence and its pitfalls for parents, the author reminds
readers of the universal needs of children, privileged or not, for
connection and discipline from parents and defines the meaning of
those terms. Well-organized chapters help parents understand how
to take the time and show the patience to help their children realize
their potential, sometimes in spite of the "advantages"
their comfortable lifestyles might offer them. A good choice for
parenting collections in libraries with clients in the middle to
upper socioeconomic ranges.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division
of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
by Vanessa Bush
Recent studies have shown that 22 percent of upper-middle-class
adolescent girls (three times the national rate) suffer from clinical
depression--a stark illustration of the old saw that money doesn't
buy happiness. Psychologist Levine draws on clinical research, hundreds
of case studies, and 25 years of treating troubled adolescents from
well-to-do families to explore the rise in mental and emotional
disorders among privileged youth. Levine offers portraits of adolescents
from homes of parental involvement and material advantage in which
the children nonetheless suffer from addictions, anxiety and eating
disorders, depression, and self-destructive behavior. Levine makes
the case for why these young people are as much "at risk"
as those from lower economic backgrounds and how the culture of
affluence can stifle self-development. She offers advice on effective
techniques to reduce pressure from parents to succeed in school
and to heighten adolescent autonomy and self-discipline. In this
insightful book, Levine eschews the temptation to dismiss problems
of privileged teens as overindulgence.
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved.
From Publishers Weekly
July 2006
A practicing psychologist in Marin County, Calif.,
Levine counsels troubled teens from affluent families, and finds
it paradoxical that wealthwhich can open the door to travel
and other enriching opportunitiescan produce such depressed,
anxious, angry and bored teenagers. After comparing notes with colleagues,
she concluded that consumerism too often substitutes for the sorts
of struggles that produce thoughtful, happy people. If objects satisfy
people, then they never get around to working on deeper issues.
The teen years are supposed to be a time for character building.
Avoiding this hard work with the distraction of consumer toys can
produce "vacant," "evacuated" or "disconnected"
teens, Levine believes. She is particularly useful when explaining
common parenting dilemmas, like the difference between being intrusive
and being involved, between laying down rules and encouraging autonomy.
Alas, while Levine pitches to the educated moms, since they do much
of the actual child-rearing, she may be preaching to the choir.
Those who need her most may be too busy shopping to pick up such
a dire-looking volume. Still, school guidance counselors should
be happy to have this clear, sensitive volume on their bookshelves.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division
of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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