Foreclosed should appeal to policymakers, researchers, and students—anyone who is interested in the economic climate of the past decade. A silver lining to the mortgage crisis is the opportunity to consider new ways to think about mortgages and housing policy, and Immergluck's book contributes to a more nuanced and productive debate about these contentious issues.(Journal of Planning Education and Research) A broad an accessible account of mortgage finance in the United States.... This book is coherent and cohesive and is well worth reading by citizens who would like to have a deeper understanding of the current mortgage mess. It is also a rewarding read for many academics and social scientists—nonspecialists who may have followed recent events in the housing market but who would like to have a more thorough grounding in its causes and antecedents.- John M. Quigley (Enterprise and Society) A timely, comprehensive text analyzing the chinks in the armor of U.S. housing finance, illustrated with useful charts to unpack complex cycles and relationships.- Corianne P. Scally (Canadian Journal of Urban Research) Dan Immergluck's Foreclosed provides a detailed historical overview of the evolution of US mortgage markets during the New Deal era, to the era of deregulation/securitization, the emergence of the high risk loan products and the sudden growth of the high risk loan market.... It presents a thorough body of evidence which illustrates that ample warnings should have been evident leading into the 2007–2008 housing crisis, but these warnings were ignored and were not reflected in policy. It also clearly points out the important role for government in both the emergence of the mortgage market and in assuring its sustainability, a role that has diminished (to our peril) in the decades leading up to the crisis.- John Powell and Jason Reece (Shelterforce) Immergluck's book is key to understanding the housing and financial crises. Foreclosed lays out the roots of subprime lending, traces their connections and implications, and catalogs the unavoidable calamitous collapse.(Journal of Planning Literature)