Rave
Alex Kotlowitz,
The Atlantic
In this richly reported book, he follows five families that sought comfort and promise in America’s suburbs over these past couple of decades, outside Chicago, Atlanta, Dallas, Los Angeles, and Pittsburgh. In each of these communities, Herold zeroes in on the schools, in large part because education captures the essence of what attracted these families: the prospect of something better for their kids.
Positive
Ben Austen,
The New York Times Book Review
...an important, cleareyed account of suburban boom and bust, and the challenges facing the country today.
Rave
Vikas Turakhia,
The Star Tribune
...presents a blistering indictment of how American suburbs were built on racism and unsustainable development 'that functioned like a Ponzi scheme'.
Positive
Caitlin Zaloom,
The New Republic
Through beautifully layered reporting, Herold argues that time and demographic change have created a novel disenchantment..
Positive
Kathleen McBroom,
Booklist
...a series of thoughtful, informative, and very disturbing accounts of once-hopeful individuals continually encountering institutional racism, embedded school system exclusivity, and crumbling community infrastructures.
Rave
Kirkus
A well-informed, ambitious narrative about the simmering inequities in American suburbs.
Positive
Publishers Weekly
Herold’s portrayals are fine-grained and attentive to the conflicts that pervade interactions between parents and educators, though some readers may be skeptical that, in Herold’s telling, the parents are always right, while teachers and school administrators fall short. Still, this is an illuminating account of a poorly understood crisis currently facing America’s public schools..