CHARLESTON, W.Va. — Newly minted vice presidential nominee JD Vance built his Wednesday night speech to the Republican National Convention around his own Appalachian roots, but it wasn't the first time he had shared his personal story.
Long before he was a U.S. senator from Ohio, Vance rose to prominence on the wings of ''Hillbilly Elegy,'' a bestselling memoir that many thought captured the essence of Donald Trump's political resonance in a rural white America ravaged by joblessness, opioid addiction and poverty.
The 2016 book set off a fierce debate in the region. Many Appalachian scholars thought it trafficked in stereotypes and blamed working-class people for their own struggles, without giving enough weight to the decades of exploitation by coal and pharmaceutical companies that figure prominently in Appalachia's story.
Some of the resentment sparked by the book crossed party lines.
''A lot of us born and raised natives of Appalachia are just highly sensitive to the fact that knocking hillbillies is the final frontier of accepted prejudice in America," said TJ Litafik, an eastern Kentucky Republican political consultant and Trump supporter.
Litafik said he would vote for Trump no matter whom he chose as vice president, but Vance was not anywhere near the top of his list. That's in part because Vance had strong words to say against Trump around the time the book was published, even suggesting once that he might be ''America's Hitler'' in a text to a former roommate that later became public.
Litafik, who read ''Hillbilly Elegy,'' subtitled ''A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis,'' and saw the 2020 film adaptation, said Vance might come off as condescending to some voters. But he called the senator ''dynamic and intelligent'' and said Vance's accomplishments are undeniably impressive.
''I think to me and to a lot of my friends, JD Vance is something of an enigma,'' Litafik said. ''We appreciate some of his recent convictions, but based on past history, there's a hesitancy there.''