"The Lost Region should be a significant contribution to midwestern history. As far as I know, no one has pulled together such a substantial reflection on the past and potential future of the field."--Pamela Riney-Kehrberg, Iowa State University
"Jon Lauck has written the definitive manifesto for a new midwestern historiography. Deeply researched, elegantly written, passionate yet sensible in its themes, it is a stunning book. One hopes that it will stun the coasties, for example, who believe that the fly-over states, many of them beginning with the letter I, have no serious history. Lauck shows that an America without the Midwest would have been less fair, less strong, less prosperous, and above all less democratic. Lauck is the new Frederick Jackson Turner, reminding us that the Midwest is the master spring of American history--without which, not."--Deirdre McCloskey, Distinguished Professor of History, University of Illinois at Chicago, and author, The Bourgeois Virtues
"Jon Lauck justifiably laments the neglect of the Midwest by both the contemporary media and, more surprisingly, by historians, but this book is a robust and persuasive response rather than a complaint. The Midwest is vital to any explanation of the United States, and at one time midwesterners--particularly his Prairie Historians--explained the region to itself and praised its importance to the rest of the country. He is right. Historians need to refill the space they once occupied."--Richard White, Stanford University