"Some books take a while to draw you in. But when I'd finished the first paragraph of Carlo Rotella's The World Is Always Coming to an End: Pulling Together and Pulling Apart in a Chicago Neighborhood, I knew that I was going to love it."
--John Wilson "Forma Review"
"The World Is Always Coming to an End is unlike any work of contemporary urban studies that I know. It combines elements of journalism, archival research, ethnography, and memoir in a study of South Shore--the South Side, Chicago, neighborhood in which Carlo grew up, in the 1970s. It's at times lyrical, at times analytic, and always engaging."--Eric Klinenberg "Public Books"
"An evocative and engaging mix of the minutely personal, the more broadly ethnographic, and the sociological in its description and analysis of a complex and interesting slice of Chicago. Rotella, who also works in long-form journalism, brings his gifts as a writer to bear on his experience of place and the terms of place itself."-- "Los Angeles Review of Books"
"An ambitious analysis of a singular neighborhood that in some ways serves as a microcosm for all urban neighborhoods. . . . The author offers a nuanced narrative, partly personal and partly sociological, that keeps circling back to the same important truths about race, class, community, poverty, and crime. A thought-provoking deep dive into a neighborhood that remains in perpetual transition."-- "Kirkus"
"It's fair to call Rotella a poet of urban life, alive to the freedom that cities offer us to pursue lives of our own devising, and of masculinity and the ways men lose and find themselves in their passions."-- "National, on Playing in Time"
"Carlo Rotella was a toddler in the late 1960s and left South Shore forty years ago, but the neighborhood remains part of him. In The World Is Always Coming to an End he explores the notion of community in a place he envisions most other American cities will look like 'when we're done reversing the postwar expansion of the middle class.'"--John Lepley "The North Meridian Review"