The collection of essays has an
introduction, an
index, and two sections called "
Grim Reality" and "
Grimmer Theory." The sections are individually broken up into chapters, with sixteen in "
Grim Reality" and six in "
Grimmer Theory." Each chapter is an individual essay, which were published in separate issues of
City Journal around seven years prior. The chapters are organised
thematically, not necessarily in
chronological order. The essays focus largely on the underclass and the premise that in the latter half of the 20th century, poverty and hunger are no longer descriptive of the poor. Instead, lack of money has been replaced with "emptiness, agonies, violence and moral squalor." A number of chapters discuss the "ferocious young egoist" that is meant to represent male youths who are violent and obsessive toward their
significant others. Dalrymple also writes about his views on the "destruction of...family ties," arguing that without family ties it is nearly impossible to rise out of the underclass. These issues, among others, are described as resulting from the "intellectual foundation...[which] makes a permanent underclass possible." This is meant to be directed against intellectuals and liberals that form the many ideas absorbed into the mentality of the underclass. In the larger first section titled "
Grim Reality," Dalrymple "uses specific stories from his practice and from some journalistic forays to show how the 'fundamental premise of popular culture' leads to actions that wreck people's lives." This section covers things like modern
Bohemianism,
drug addictions and
overdoses, lack of education, familial obligations,
physical abuse and the concept of personal responsibility for choices made. Then, in the section "
Grimmer Theory," he "shows that the twentieth century's intellectuals have provided members of the underclass with a battery of rationalizations by which they can shift the blame for their misery away from their actions and attitudes and can unleash their hatred of everyone who challenges their outlook." Focusing on ideas more than events, this section considers the concepts of
relativism,
determinism and
egalitarianism, and how each idea, in their creation by the
bourgeoisie intellectuals, adversely affects the underclass. ==Themes==