This book is an engaging and informative piece of work. Jones accomplishes what many of us would like to do: live and work within a close-knit community to gain greater insight into traditional behaviors and then examine how this information can be extrapolated and compared to the archaeological record. This ethnoarchaeological approach to understanding Fijian lifeways, particularly as it relates to subsistence strategies, will be a useful resource for anthropologists and archaeologists alike—not just in the Pacific—but elsewhere in contexts where researchers are looking for novel ways to integrate human-environmental interactions across a diachronic spectrum.