Having grown up in Vegas, I can relate to everything I DID read. Unfortunately, I just wasn't in the mood to relive it the whole thing, so I didn't get all the way through.
For those folks who have written reviews elsewhere rejecting the idea that the author only sought out a saturated handful of Vegas folks to interview and therefore only heard the down-and-dirty/skewed perspective: in my opinion, the majority of people who are raised in Vegas have a similar upbringing as these interviewees; they aren't the minority. Vegas isn't a place you think about when dreaming of raising a family, and for good reason--it's full of drugs, excessive drinking, addictive gambling, blatant sexualization of women, gangs, violence, transience, and poverty. The public schools are a joke, and when I grew up most folks had to work in the casinos--where there wasn't health care, vacations/sick time, or decent shifts, so sprinkle in all that comes from not having parent(s) at home and all the stress of having little to no job security.
Long story short, good for the author for shining some light on what it is like growing up in a city known for depravity.