Jessica Hoppe is a Honduran Ecuadorian writer based in New York City. She has been featured on ABC News and HBO Max Pa’lante! and her work has appeared in the Latino Book Review, New York Times, Vogue, Paper, and elsewhere. Jessica is a board member of Time of Butterflies, a nonprofit supporting families through domestic abuse recovery, and an organizer with the Central American Writer’s group. First in the Family is her debut memoir.
Book Festival Author
Jessica Hoppe
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First in the Family: A Story of Survival, Recovery, and the American Dream
In this deeply moving and lyrical memoir, Hoppe shares an intimate, courageous account of what it means to truly interrupt cycles of harm. For readers of "The Recovering" by Leslie Jamison, "Somebody’s Daughter" by Ashley C. Ford, and "Heavy" by Kiese Laymon.
During the first year of quarantine, drug overdoses spiked, the highest ever recorded. And Hoppe’s cousin was one of them. “I never learned the true history of substance use disorder in my family,” Hoppe writes. “People just disappeared.” At the time of her cousin’s death, she’d been in recovery for nearly four years, but she hadn’t told anyone.
In "First in the Family," Hoppe shares her journey, the first in her family to do so, and takes the reader on a remarkable investigation of her family’s history, the American Dream, and the erasure of BIPOC from recovery institutions and narratives, leaving the reader with an urgent message of hope.