"Returns to the Field is a highly readable collection of essays filled with insights on how long-term, or multitemporal, fieldwork has both deepened and complicated the reflexive processes through which anthropologists and their interlocutors produce new understandings of how people experience and navigate social change. The importance of long-term fieldwork based on return visits to the same host communities has been recognized within mainstream anthropology since early days of the discipline, but the editors of Returns to the Field have taken this tacit recognition to a new level by exploring theoretical and methodological dimensions of such fieldwork. Contributors include renowned senior scholars who have worked for decades in such diverse regions as Amazonia, Africa, Australia, Oceania, and Asia and who convincingly demonstrate that the intimate knowledge gained over multiple returns to the field offers unique abilities to grasp the significance of unpredictable events as well as the existence of core values that persist over time."—Jonathan Hill, Southern Illinois University Carbondale"This book demonstrates the extraordinarily powerful bonds that can grow between long-term ethnographers and the people they study. In doing so, it offers a penetrating vision of the resilience and vulnerability inherent in people's creative efforts to remain true to their core cultural values."—Sharon Hutchinson, University of Wisconsin-Madison"Overall, this is a great collection of essays that hang together well and — for once! — address the common theme that the edited volume is ostensibly about. At the same time, each is strong enough that it could be read separately. If you are interested in the topic or the contributors, it is definitely worth picking up."—savageminds.org"This is an important book because we need a disciplinary conversation about our myths. . . . [I]s more always better? Are there limits to the value of returns to the field? What are the costs and who will bear them? Returns to the Field has done us the valuable service of allowing this conversation to begin."—Social Anthropology"[V]aluable insights can be gained by returning to the field—whether physically or intellectually—to reflect upon the inevitable shifts in the researcher's intellectual transformation, disciplinary trends, and even popular understandings of key events and narratives that have been documented. Summer/Fall 2014"—Oral History Review