This book makes an extremely important and original contribution to the literature on globalization of domestic work, to the emerging literature on the care economy which is dominated by transnational immigrant women who enter private live-in care arrangements with clients, and more generally, to the study of women in the domestic work industry as well as the local and global forces that explain why an increasing number of women from the global South seek economic opportunities in the global North. The study’s central concern – the lived experiences of Ghanaian live-in caregivers – breaks new ground. To the best of my knowledge, it is the first text that seeks to place the experiences of Ghanaian women in the U.S. squarely within the burgeoning literature on the care economy. This is long overdue given the rapidly expanding involvement of Ghanaian and African women in live-in care in the U.S., an area of increasing importance in an aging economy. This book gives visibility and voice to a group that is seldom seen and rarely heard through rich research details and histories of individual live-in caregivers.