Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

A look at overlooked towns that find ways to thrive

- John Reinan

Much of our national dialogue in recent years has focused on the America left behind: the working-class towns, the backwoods communitie­s, the places abandoned by capitalism that seemingly had no answers to their ongoing decline.

In this ambitious, exhaustive­ly reported book, James and Deborah Fallows visited nearly 30 such places that have found their answers. James, a national correspond­ent for the Atlantic Monthly, and Deborah, an author and academic (they are married to each other), spent more than four years crisscross­ing America in their small plane.

They mostly focused on communitie­s off the beaten path; in other words, they flew into flyover country. And what they found should give hope to the America that’s reeling from decades of social, political, financial and technologi­cal upheaval.

As the authors dropped from the sky into communitie­s from Sioux Falls, S.D., to Duluth, Minn., to Ajo, N.M., to Burlington, Vt., to St. Mary’s, Ga., they slowly pieced together a list of qualities that determine why some communitie­s make it and others don’t. Among them: innovative schools, true public-private partnershi­ps and real, thriving downtowns.

But the real key to success, they found, is people. The authors had a standard question they’d ask soon after arriving in a new place: “Who makes this town go?” The answer could be a business tycoon, a civic activist, even a saloon keeper or a folk musician.

“What mattered was that the question had an answer,” the authors write. “The more quickly this question was answered, the better shape a town was in.”

The book introduces us to dozens of inspiring stories and people, from civic-minded business leaders, to charismati­c educators, to politician­s willing to yank a downtrodde­n city out of its comfortabl­e rut.

Even as the authors pile up their stirring and informativ­e tales, a sense of sameness occasional­ly sets in. By the time you’ve met a half-dozen dynamic small-town mayors with a vision for reviving their downtowns, there’s a sense of been there, done that.

But it’s that level of immersion that also allows the authors to lay out a common-sense and well-informed list of themes that could make up a road map to success for any city searching for direction.

A gridlocked Washington, D.C., gets all the attention, the authors write. But the real action is happening at the state and local levels, where communitie­s are taking charge of their directions.

Superbly reported, cleanly and briskly written, brimming with reallife solutions, this is a book for anyone who cares about the life of American communitie­s.

 ?? PANTHEON ?? Our Towns. By James and Deborah Fallows. Pantheon.
PANTHEON Our Towns. By James and Deborah Fallows. Pantheon.

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