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Our Towns: A 100,000-Mile Journey into the Heart of America

di James Fallows, Deborah Fallows

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292991,303 (3.48)14
"A unique, revelatory portrait of small-town America: the activities, changes, and events that shape this mostly unseen part of our national landscape, and the issues and concerns that matter to the ordinary Americans who make these towns their home. For the last five years, James and Deborah Fallows have been traveling across America in a single-prop airplane, visiting small cities and meeting civic leaders, factory workers, recent immigrants, and young entrepreneurs, seeking to take the pulse and discern the outlook of an America that is unreported and unobserved by the national media. Attending town meetings, breakfasts at local coffee shops, and events at local libraries, they have listened to the challenges and problems that define American lives today. Our Towns is the story of their journey--an account of their visits to twenty-one cities and towns: the individuals they met, the stories they heard, and their portrait of the many different faces of the American future"--… (altro)
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The authors recount their frequent small-plane flights to various small and mid-size cities across the Lower 48 (most of the places they visit can't really fairly be called towns). In each section they highlight the unique aspects of each place and how the area was coping with various pressures in the mid-2010s, finding common themes that tend to unite the success stories. They tend to downplay discord and systemic problems, and often their tales come off as a bit more optimistic and boostery than perhaps is warranted. (I am, to be fair, perhaps more jaded than the ideal reader for this book).

I'd be curious to read about some of the places they mention in passing that didn't seem to be doing as well, for example. But there is a lot of interesting content here, anyway, and the book gives a good sense of how some cities are finding imaginative ways to thrive. ( )
  JBD1 | Apr 21, 2024 |
Jim and Deb Fallows fly their lovely tiny airplane around the USA looking a towns that seem to be on the move up, trying to understand why they are moving up. There is a sameness to these bootstrap stories and something too Pollyanna for me, a kind of secular Prosperity Gospel. At some core level I do not believe that we can think ourselves or our towns out of dismal straits. ( )
  Dokfintong | Sep 14, 2023 |
Flying around the country in a small plane with your best friend and partner and then writing a book about it? Couple goals!

It was nice to be reminded of the American can-do attitude and the work that is happening in parts of the country to renew themselves. I miss reading about the America of innovators and small businesses. I would like more, please.

( )
  auldhouse | Sep 30, 2021 |
Just sad that this book hasn't lived up to my expectations. But it does have some redeeming factors.

First the bad: I agree with other reviewers that it is pretentious and elitist writing from an east-coast standpoint. The authors shouldn't be so surprised to discover things like libraries in these places, or so quick to apply their own definitions to terms that obviously mean different things to different people. For a journalist and a linguist, they really don't write very well....or maybe they just needed a good editor. It was annoying for them to discuss a problem for several paragraphs, then never tell us what the local solution was. I also wonder if maybe organizing the book by "solutions" and making it shorter rather than by "city/trip" would have made it more readable. Finally, these are not "towns." With an average population of over 146,000, the places the Fallows visit are clearly cities. And they really don't focus on much more than economic problems and city revitalization.

The good: city or town planners will probably find some good ideas here that they might be able to apply to their situations. If you are concerned about revitalizing your community or trying to solve some local economic problems, you might find some good suggestions here, but pick one chapter and their final suggestions and skip the rest of the book. ( )
  Jeff.Rosendahl | Sep 21, 2021 |
nonfiction by husband-wife journalist team traveling to small towns across the US in a little private plane.
read to page 48. I think I was hoping this would be more like [a:Studs Terkel|33716|Studs Terkel|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1445205508p2/33716.jpg]'s extensive collections of oral histories, but it was more like two people writing about their hobby, finding places to visit and talking about economic growth with whomever they thought were significant local figures (mayors, major business owners and contributors) as well as the staff they met at the restaurants and inns and odd passersby. Snippets of conversations are paraphrased and reduced into overarching themes for each location. ( )
  reader1009 | Jul 3, 2021 |
The pair drop down into 29 towns across the USA’s length and breadth, soft-landing at the local airport and fanning out to sample the local institutions, industries and attitudes. This proves way more enticing in theory as a vagabond literary conceit than it is in reality as a 400-plus-page revisiting of the towns the couple called on. For all the words and effort they expend to illuminate each town’s innermost essences, the result is too often an extended civics lesson.
aggiunto da Shortride | modificaUSA Today, Barry Singer (May 8, 2018)
 

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Nome dell'autoreRuoloTipo di autoreOpera?Stato
James Fallowsautore primariotutte le edizionicalcolato
Fallows, Deborahautore principaletutte le edizioniconfermato
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"A unique, revelatory portrait of small-town America: the activities, changes, and events that shape this mostly unseen part of our national landscape, and the issues and concerns that matter to the ordinary Americans who make these towns their home. For the last five years, James and Deborah Fallows have been traveling across America in a single-prop airplane, visiting small cities and meeting civic leaders, factory workers, recent immigrants, and young entrepreneurs, seeking to take the pulse and discern the outlook of an America that is unreported and unobserved by the national media. Attending town meetings, breakfasts at local coffee shops, and events at local libraries, they have listened to the challenges and problems that define American lives today. Our Towns is the story of their journey--an account of their visits to twenty-one cities and towns: the individuals they met, the stories they heard, and their portrait of the many different faces of the American future"--

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