Lisa M. Fine is chair and professor of history at Michigan State University. She is the author of The Souls of the Skyscraper: Female Clerical Workers in Chicago, 1870-1930 (Temple, 1990) and The Story of Reo Joe: Work, Kin, and Community in Autotown, USA (Temple, 2004).
""The story of environmentalism and the story of labor have often been told separately. In this compelling book Lisa Fine weaves these stories together in a specific place and space--Downriver Detroit--to show how workers have struggled not just for improved wages and working conditions but also to protect nature. Through recovering the history of the labor movement's engagement with questions of pollution, toxic waste, and landscape degradation in the Downriver, she reminds us that working-class people are not just workers but also hunters, gardeners, outdoors enthusiasts, and conservationists who often care deeply about the health of both the work and the natural environments within which they live and raise families and who fight tooth and nail to safeguard both.""