"Ogren's exploration of what teachers did in the summer expands our understanding of teachers' lives and education in important, fascinating ways. Disparagement of time 'off' was part of deprofessionalization and a rationale for low pay and status, while teachers expanded their knowledge, perspective, and skills at their own expense. Charmed by Ogren's well-written accounts of teachers from diverse backgrounds, I remembered summer school classes, War and Peace, an enrichment program for urban kids, working on the census, swimming in Walden Pond, and more when I was teaching kindergarten in the Boston Public Schools. Summer's on, you'll learn a lot!" - Barbara Beatty (professor emerita of education, Wellesley College) "In this deeply researched, fascinating account, Ogren not only reveals rich new dimensions of how teachers a century ago chose to live during their precious summer months, but why their stories remain relevant for us today." - Jackie M. Blount (author of Fit to Teach: Same-Sex Desire, Gender, and School Work in the Twentieth Century)