"An artful mixture of ethnography, narrative history, in-depth interviews and legal scholarship . . . The Fight to Save the Town situates itself in an active nationwide debate about the nature of what it means to live together. . . . [Anderson] advocates for complex solutions that require citizen engagement, in the hope that trusting relationships, built over time, will bring disaffected people back to active civic life. . . . If we learn to save our towns, we will also be learning to save ourselves." -The New York Times Book Review "The Fight to Save the Town changed my understanding of America. This insightful, narrative-driven book tells the story of four cities and towns with deep poverty and gutted public services. But in focusing on Americans who have committed heart and soul to their communities, Anderson weaves an ultimately hopeful story and delivers a blueprint for reform. This book pierced me and left me inspired." -Matthew Desmond, author of Evicted "Anderson's book is powerful in portraying both what seems fated about hard-pressed communities and regions, and what remains within a community's control." -James Fallows, coauthor of Our Towns "When a region suffers job loss and poverty is a way of life, local government becomes an overlooked make-or-break player. Does it lay off needed workers, impose fines and get itself hated? Or does it draw on its people's extraordinary leadership and find a far better way? Through vivid up-close portraits, Anderson gives us unsung heroes in four remarkable, turn-around communities-whom she calls 'good teachers' for the rest of America. Such an important read." -Arlie Hochschild, author of Strangers in Their Own Land "A welcome reminder of what government can accomplish if given the chance." -San Francisco Chronicle "A hard-hitting yet hopeful look at how impoverished communities in the U.S. are fighting for their survival. . . . Anderson contextualizes her detailed demographic and economic data with vivid portraits of local families and activists. The result is an astute and powerful vision for improving America." -Publishers Weekly "Compelling . . . An ambitious, empathetic work documenting community-building versus political intransigence and racial strife . . . The Fight to Save the Town offers a corrective to bigoted narratives portraying cities as toxic boondoggles, showing how postindustrial decline blurred many complex factors. . . . It's a welcome study of life in late-capitalist America." -Kirkus Reviews "Regional inequality in the US has been overlooked for too long, and in The Fight to Save the Town, Michelle Wilde Anderson zeroes in on one of its most urgent aspects: the struggles of local government in the working-class towns and cities that are most defined by impoverishment. With empathy, analytical acuity and highly readable prose, Anderson tells the story of the places that have wrongly been left for dead-wrongly because they remain home to millions of Americans, including countless people like those she profiles here who are laboring day after day to improve their cities' lot. Anderson helps us understand why the obstacles facing these cities are so enormous, but also shows us why we should have hope." -Alec MacGillis, author of Fulfillment: Winning and Losing in One-Click America "The Fight to Save the Town is a gift to scholars and policymakers working in, or at the intersection of, local government law, community economic development, and urban policy. Anderson captures so much of the history, lived experience, and humanity of places like Detroit, Lawrence, and Stockton while bringing to bear, with remarkable clarity, the trenchant insights regarding municipal governance and finance gleaned from her scholarly research over the years. By lifting up the people in these places that are so essential to reimagining a different future she leaves us with hope that these cities can thrive again." -Sheila R. Foster, Professor of Law and Public Policy, Geo...