| Author/Contributor(s): | Hampton, Timothy |
| Publisher: | High Road Books |
| Date: | 2/9/2027 |
| Binding: | Hardcover |
| Condition: | NEW |
Timothy Hampton grew up poor in a small petroleum town in the Four Corners region of the American Southwest, surrounded by the Navajo, Ute, and Jicarilla Apache Nations. The son of a disabled father with deep roots in the region, Hampton came of age in a world shaped by hardship, instability, and life on the “wrong side of the tracks.” Education offered an unexpected way out.
In Trespasser: A Story of Class, Poverty, and Education in the American Desert, Hampton traces his journey from rural New Mexico to the halls of Princeton, Yale, and Berkeley, where he reshaped himself into a distinguished scholar of comparative literature. Blending memoir, cultural history, and sharp social critique, Hampton explores how an education rooted in the humanities bridged the vast divide between the mythologized American West of his childhood and the rarefied world of elite higher education.
But Trespasser is more than a personal story of success against daunting obstacles. A powerful meditation on class in America—an issue often forgotten in contemporary debates about identity—Trespasser moves with wit and precision to argue that class inequality remains a harsh feature of the nation’s unfinished promise of opportunity.
At once intimate and incisive, Trespasser is a deeply American story about the values of a liberal education, economic mobility, and what we lose by leaving behind those whose lives have been shaped by poverty.