Bittersweet Lane

Creating Home(s) in the American Affordable Housing Crisis

Published by 100 Block by Row House
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

About The Book

The Bitter Reality. The Sweet Solutions. The Lane Forward.

Housing dominates headlines, yet few truly understand how affordable housing works—or why it’s failing. Bittersweet Lane is the first book to demystify America’s housing crisis from both a professional and deeply personal perspective.

Spanning from Ireland to America, from the Bittersweet Lane Apartments to M.I.T., Bittersweet Lane also carries the stories and deep scars of intergenerational poverty while offering a bold vision for change.

Written by a community development professional with expertise in housing development and public policy, Madden blends gripping memoir with sharp policy insights to expose the brutal history of housing in the U.S.—and the tools we already have to fix it.

A raw, eye-opening journey through class, race, and urban development, Bittersweet Lane offers:

A class-crossing insider's perspective from housing insecurity to shaping policy.

A clear breakdown of affordable housing without the jargon.

Real solution to the crisis and why we haven't implemented them.

Though the barriers to housing justice seem insurmountable, the solutions are within reach. Bittersweet Lane doesn’t just explain the crisis—it shows how we can all find home.

About The Author

Jamie Madden is a dad and community development professional with expertise in housing development, public policy, and real estate finance. Jamie grew up in affordable housing at the Bittersweet Lane Apartments in Randolph, MA and went on to work for the housing industry’s leading national non-profits. His work has directly created more than one-thousand affordable homes. Jamie earned his Master of City Planning from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his BA in Political Science and Chinese from Swarthmore College, but he learned his most important lessons inside Massachusetts’ most diverse high school, Randolph Jr/Sr High. 

 

Product Details

  • Publisher: 100 Block by Row House (December 16, 2025)
  • Length: 400 pages
  • ISBN13: 9798991642897

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Raves and Reviews

A stunning portrait of policy, personal struggles, and the pervasive problem of a nation that fails to care for its people. In a beautifully written and rigorously researched examination of why housing matters, Jamie brings us inside his family and his passion for housing justice in a painful and illuminating story. Every voter, every community member, and every person who claims to care about others needs to read this heartbreaking and critically important book.

– Marcia Chatelain, author of the Pulitzer Prize winning book Franchise: The Golden Arches in Black America

This is one of the most original, provocative, and timely assessments yet produced about America’s housing affordability crisis and what to do about it. For far too long, it has been a quiet crisis, as Madden shows—riddled with moral denial, bad assumptions, kick-the-can politics, and forceful resistance to change at any meaningful scale. The author’s remarkable family story, combined with long experience producing homes people can actually afford, gives us an account as searing and blunt as it is practical and inspiring. Jamie Madden’s wisdom should be widely read and—most importantly—heard.

– Xavier ‘Xav’ de Souza Briggs, senior fellow, Brookings Institution; author of Democracy as Problem Solving and The Geography of Opportunity

Jamie Madden provides a unique perspective on affordable housing challenges through the lens of someone who grew up in poverty and lived in low income housing in Greater Boston. 
 
He skillfully weaves his gripping personal stories with a content-rich history of affordable housing in the U.S. coupled with tips for being a successful non-profit developer. 
 
This is a must-read for those wanting to gain new insights into the complexity of affordable housing as a public policy issue and to learn how to make things better.

– Aaron Gornstein, President CEO, Preservation of Affordable Housing

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