Young offers a thought-provoking history and analysis of house museums as a specialized type of museum in Great Britain and especially in the US. She usefully identifies seven categories of house museums (the seventh being the ‘insignificant’ house, often preserved by local activists). The author notes that house museums share some of the same history and challenges of other types of museums (e.g., declining lack of interest in formal tours) but face their own challenges (too much of the same thing, i.e., too many heroes’ houses). Abundant references to specific examples of each type of house museum make this a useful guide for professional curators and preservationists rethinking strategies to maintain these as vibrant cultural institutions. Young’s final chapter looks to the future by addressing the recent decline in historic house visitorship and discussing various proposed solutions, such as transforming appropriate house museums into community centers. A thorough bibliography emphasizes recent scholarship and current discussion. Non-specialists will also find much to ponder in the motivations of people who preserve history and the relationship of the public to historical institutions.Summing Up: Recommended. All levels/libraries.