Quotes From Reviews
"Joe Manning goes right to the heart and soul of a town. On the surface,
Steeples is a book about North Adams; but it is much more. It is a book that honors history, the people that
live it, and the ways in which they are inextricably intertwined." -Elizabeth Winthrop, author of fifty works of fiction
for adults and children. Her books include Island Justice and In My Mother's House; and for children, The
Castle In The Attic and Shoes
"Steeples is a splendid book. Wise, engaging, and informative,
it provides a wonderful bridge between North Adams as it was and the place we see today. Manning has caught both the spirit
and the richly complex character of its past better than anything that has ever been written about the subject." -Robert
F. Dalzell, Ephraim Williams Professor of History at Williams College, and author of numerous books and articles on early
American history
"Every American town should be fortunate enough to have a chronicler
as devoted and creative as Joe Manning. After reading the funny, tragic, and insightful interviews, you may feel that you
know these people, almost as if they were your own neighbors." -Roadside
Magazine
"I am fascinated by Steeples. It gives me a real sense
of North Adams and of a time that is all but forgotten. Steeples is a treasure!" -David
Plowden, photographer and author
"Steeples is an evocation of something that has been
lost in the heart of America. I find the interviews very moving. I am impressed with the photographs and the richness of the
urbanism that they evoke." -James Howard Kunstler, author of The Geography of Nowhere
"Joe Manning uses interviews, his own poems and photographs to tell the story of
the city of North Adams and its struggle to maintain its history. The interviews tell a very personal story, one which Manning
obviously has invested himself in. A very original historical work." -Historical Journal of Massachusetts
"Steeples is a wonderful document - one students could
use as a model to preserve (or simply perceive) some of the wonders of their own localities." -Eric Oatman, Editorial Director,
Weekly Reader