Calling on a decade of participant observation at a residence for
mentally retarded adults, anthropologist Michael V. Angrosino's riveting
and de-mystifying account offers an insider's picture of the lives of
the inhabitants of Opportunity House. Using the narrative device of a
dozen fictional short stories told in the voices of various community
members as well as that of the researcher, Angrosino weaves a
life-histories approach to ethnography together with an innovative
culture concept to tackle the complexities of representing marginalized
subgroups. As opposed to traditional clinical or statistical studies,
which have insufficiently conveyed the subjective and experiential
perspectives of retarded people themselves, Angrosino presents an
intimate and complex picture of a highly functioning community with its
cast of entrepreneurs, bullies, victims, and do-gooders. This
wonderfully readable and captivating account is therefore an important
resource for those interested in mental illness and disability, as well
as a model for those experimenting with forms of ethnographic writing.