This is a most welcome and insightful case study of the emerging urban middle classes in Latin America. In this fascinating ethnography, Pereyra draws out convincingly the general from the particular, showing that being middle class in Lima is a status and life style and not just an occupational class. He brings to life the clash of values that pits the older generations against the younger and the socially mobile newcomers from poor neighborhoods, with the former seeing worth as appropriate behavior whereas the latter groups emphasize economic success. The meaning of being middle class is changing in Lima, but, as Pereyra shows, slowly and with adjustment pains.Latin American middle classes are often appealed to by politicians and advertisers but are, in fact, little understood, and often taken for granted by scholars as little more than a residual category between elites and the poor. ?This terrific new book rights these tendencies while opening up new research vistas in which middle classes are both fluid and plural, and constantly in redefinition against others. ?Drawing on some of the very best traditions of urban ethnography and firmly anchored in a relational and cultural sociology, this book illuminates what it is like to be a middle class Sanfelipano while making an important contribution to our understanding of a broader Latin American phenomenon.?Omar Pereyra combines methodological sophistication with an intimate sense of place and a sharp eye for cultural subtleties and human foibles. His case studya unique 33-building complex built in the 1960s for public- and private-sector employeesoffers a near-perfect venue to examine generational change and intergenerational conflict within Limas middle classes. As traditional white-collar and professional groups decline and age, new middle groups have emerged that are more entrepreneurial, often wealthier but less stable, andsignificantlymore ethnically diverse. By looking at relations among these distlw