In her new book, “The Accordion Family,” sociologist Katherine Newman examines why more young adults in the world’s wealthiest countries are returning home to live with their parents — a phenomenon ...
About a fifth of men aged 25 to 34 are living at home again. With few jobs available to recent college grads, and young people generally, the post-recession economy has created a wave of “boomerang ...
The early teen years are a time when many kids are taking their first band class or tooling around on a drum set they got for Christmas. Maybe they’re learning the school’s fight song on the trumpet ...
Newman (The Missing Class) examines the proliferation of “accordion families,” in which children continue to live with their parents late into their 20s and 30s. It’s a phenomenon that spans cultures ...
SAN ANTONIO — At 14-years-old, Christopher Ramirez is an award-winning accordionist. His quest to learn the instrument started at age nine, listening to music on his parents' radio. "One day, I asked ...
Across the street from a wine lounge and a gourmet sausage spot on Glendale Boulevard in Atwater Village, a small red-and-white neon sign reads: "DAVE'S ACCORDION SCHOOL." Inside, black and tan cases ...
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