''This genre-blending work combines biography, family and social history, ethnography, political economy, and personal observation to provide a penetrating examination of the implications of place-based practice on local and global citizenship. Through his family's own experiences, Talmage A. Stanley effectively argues that the natural, built, and social environments of a particular place can produce a way of life that is an honest response to the demands, limits, and promises of that place. The work is promising for use in Appalachian and American studies, community sociology, environmental studies, activism, and sustainable development.'' Dwight B. Billings, co-author of The Road to Poverty: The Making of Wealth and Hardship in Appalachia ''A terrific contribution to an understudied topic in Appalachian studies: middle-class culture, society, and politics. Talmage A. Stanley's compassionate depiction of a sector often simply referred to as 'local elites' or the 'managerial class' exposes a tragedy akin to that of Willy Loman in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman. His elaboration of the West Virginia coalfield experience as an archetypal form particular to the industrial capitalist social vision is brilliantly illuminated by fragments of his family archive.'' Mary Hufford, editor of Conserving Culture: A New Discourse on Heritage