Thomas Sheridan's fine book tells an increasingly familiar story of how
mexicanos in a southwestern community have fared over time under Anglo-American control. . . . A splendid book.
Pacific Historian
Widely acclaimed as a model of innovative research, inspired writing, and thoughtful analysis.
Journal of Arizona History
This is a rich and wide-ranging history of Mexicans in Tucson from the post-Mexican War era to World War II. . . . A valuable new addition to Chicano and southwestern community history.
The American Historical Review
Blending oral histories, biographies and computer-processed census data, Los Tucsonenses traces the flowering of this Mexican culture.
Arizona Republic
A model of how such studies should be executed and presented.
SMRC Newsletter
Everyone who reads it will emerge with an enriched understanding of the city's history.
Tucson Citizen
The subject matter alone makes this a significant study. But beyond that, the book has two other strengths: it is thoroughly researched and documented, and the author has avoided model building in favor of telling the story his facts support. . . . A noteworthy addition to regional, urban, and ethnic history collections
Choice