"Hogg convincingly argues that the literate artifacts produced and inspired by women in post-World War II Paxton, Nebraska, in effect "grew" a community of people such as herself. . . . Her interpretive lens encourages further study about women sponsoring literacy in post-World War II America."—Western American Literature "Anyone with an interest in the interplay of place, community, and literary practice as well as in the way women come together to influence the results of such a combination will find this book an engaging and useful read."—Ramirose I. Attebury, Libraries & the Cultural Record