"Someplace Like America is unrelenting prose. . . . There's something doggedly heroic in this commitment to one of journalism's least glamorous, least remunerative subjects."-- "New Yorker"
"Pulitzer Prize-winning author and photographer team Maharidge and Williamson continue their heartfelt chronicle of the travails facing America's poor and homeless . . . Presenting new stories from today's 'Great Depression' and updating their accounts of those impoverished during the recession of the '80s and the supposed boom years of the '90s, this book evokes the Depression-era collaboration of Walker Evans and James Agee."-- "Publishers Weekly"
"The strength of Someplace Like America is Maharidge's ability to tell the story of the down and out, a story made all the more real by the photographs of Michael Williamson. Yes, perhaps sociologists could learn to humanize our subjects, especially in quantitative accounts of inequality . . . Instead, the real challenge is to understand why we have not witnessed a broad-based class mobilization to challenge the massive growth in inequality in America that Maharidge and Williamson so deftly document in this book."-- "Contemporary Sociology"
"The really wonderful thing about the book is that it's not just a cavalcade of ruin porn--it's very honest about the hardships that the working poor face on a daily basis, but it shines as bright a light on the resilience that Maharidge ultimately hopes will be everyone's salvation. You'll meet some really interesting people, and get to experience what is really a legitimate journalistic adventure. . . . It comes with a huge clutch of Michael Williamson's excellent photojournalism as well."-- "Huffington Post"
"The evening (and morning and 24 hour) news spends a great deal of time on the American economy, but watching well dressed and perfectly groomed anchors talk about statistics, show political sound bites, and interview down on their luck families just isn't the same as reading Dale Maharidge's words or looking at Michael S. Williamson's photographs."-- "PopMatters"
"Deserves high praise . . . . Undeniable relevance to today's American experience."-- "Foreword Reviews"
"Through powerful essays and haunting photographs we experience how typical middle class Americans have endured job loss, poverty and homelessness."-- "Dayton Daily News"
"Written in the grand tradition of the early 20th-century muckrakers--Lincoln Steffens, Ida Tarbell, Ray Stannard Baker--this is a book that occasionally confounds as it shifts from decade to decade, story to story, but which drives home its central theme that America has lost its way. Maharidge 's straightforward-but-impassioned prose and Williamson's gritty black-and-white photographs make you angry. They're an indictment."-- "American Studies"
"Future journalists and citizen bloggers should study this book for its craft. . . . It's full of hard-core examples of the kind of reporting that defeats stereotypes and challenges the status quo. . . . Williamson's black-and-white photos also tell powerful stories. . . . They are breathtaking in scope and detail."-- "New Labor Forum"
"Maharidge and Williamson deliver a heart-wrenching and thought-provoking work. . . . Williamson's stunning black-and-white photographs span three decades and capture pockets of a crumbling America that few have witnessed. He and Maharidge give a much-needed voice to the people who continue to fall through the cracks--people who want neither your pity nor your politics as they fight to survive and to regain a sense of pride in themselves and in their nation."-- "Santa Fe New Mexican"