“This is a richly contextualized longitudinal and intimate portrait of an island people and the field work done to learn about them” — James Russell McGoodwin, University of Colorado
“I found the account of her original trip and then the changes when she returned quite interesting. It is an excellent illustration of how cultures change over time.” — Vaughn M. Bryant, Texas A&M University
“Nest in the Wind is very popular with my students. Martha Ward’s engaging experiences allow students to see how anthropologists do their fieldwork and explore cultural differences.” — Patrick Chapman, South Puget Sound Community College
“I would use this as a dual case study: the ‘story’ of a culture as well as an example of the dynamics of anthropological research . . . what goes on in the mind of the researcher. Being a longitudinal study is an added plus.” — Karen Bourg, Nashville State Community College
“Martha Ward is a talented writer. My students enjoyed the book while gaining a sense of the ethnographic endeavor and of the changes on the island. The new edition conveys the dynamics of change for Pohnpei (and Ward) nicely.” — Uzi Baram, New College of Florida
“I thought this was excellent. I am considering it as an ethnography for my human sexuality class. It is definitely appropriate for a class on gender or introduction to cultural anthropology.” — Patricia Whelehan, SUNY, Potsdam
“I think it is a great example of the perils of field work and how difficult it is to separate oneself from the culture of study.” — Barbara Jones, Brookdale Community College
“I have used the earlier edition; it was a good choice from the students’ perspectives as well as mine.” — Susan DeMille Walter, St. Mary’s University
“. . . a very special book.” — American Ethnologist
“Nest in the Wind is a readable, enjoyable, and insightful work presenting the personal and professional experiences of a young American woman conducting medical anthropological research in Pohnpei in the early 1970s.” — Robert W. Franco, American Anthropologist
“Here Ward gives us a first-person account of her adventures as she learned to get along and accomplish her work in an unfamiliar and often uncomfortable tropical island environment, among people of an unfamiliar culture. Along with telling her personal story she manages to convey a great deal about Pohnpeian life, society, and culture.” — R. Berleant-Schiller, Choice
“Ward does a masterful job bringing this exotic research setting and the dynamics of fieldwork alive for the reader.” — Suzanne Falgout, Pacific Studies
“It’s wonderful—down to earth, human, humane, and truthful. The style is engaging, highly readable, and thoroughly enjoyable.” — Charlotte Frisbie, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
“The ethnographic content provides a good starting point for discussions of area similarities and differences while the fieldwork format adds some luster to what can be rather dry ethnographic fact.” — Franklin Young, University of San Diego
“Shows the underlying realities of fieldwork and research that most of us haven’t the nerve to write about. Should prove to be an excellent and more realistic book for priming students to enter fieldwork.” — Joseph K. Long, Plymouth State College
“Written with a verve more characteristic of a novelist than an anthropologist, this book is my choice for the primary text for a course on introductory sociocultural anthropology. Ward presents all of the salient terms and concepts of anthropology in a personal way, embedding them in daily life experiences and thus making them more readily accessible to the introductory student.” — Claire R. Farrer, Colorado College