"By weaving interlocking issues into a highly accessible ethnography, Wilson makes a valuable contribution to the growing bodies of scholarship on social networks, migration, gender, and culture change in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. I highly recommend this fascinating book to both scholars and students."—Gender & Society
"Wilson’s special attention to women’s roles in migration networks helps close a gap
in the literature on the subject as well as contributing to migration theory. Her book gives the reader a glimpse of the diversity and complexity of migrant networks based upon the experience of one family. Doña Consuelo’s strength in the face of adversity leaves a lasting impression, and her story is a unique contribution to our understanding of migrant networks."—Latin American Perspectives