Country clubs are places people join in order to play golf and spend time with like-minded people. Most are quite expensive and hence are exclusive. Few members of such clubs are nonwhiteanother form of exclusion. Most clubs now have women members, but they are kept in 'their place,' e.g., with limited times for playing golf. In her study of four country clubs, which are mainly male, white, and wealthy, Sherwood (Rhode Island) asks how members account for their exclusive conduct. ( Account is the sociological term that refers to the way people explain or justify their behavior.) The account given for excluding the less well off is just that: they cannot afford membership. Most members deny racial exclusion because of one or two wealthy and professional African American members. The subtle, disguised account for the subordinate status of women in the clubs is that it is like their place in family, namely, not quite equal partners. Sherwood's many cited member comments . . . convey a sense of the varied mind-sets of club members. Summing Up: Recommended.Jessica Sherwood has produced a book that is worthy of serious attention. . . . A strength of the book is the thorough methodology which Sherwood refers to frequently throughout her narrative and also further extends in a separate section. Additionally, Sherwood gives thoughtful insights into how the thoughts and opinion of the affluent affect those around them. . . . Wealth, whiteness and the matrix of privilege: The View from the Country Club is well organized, thorough and thought provocative. Sherwood has provided a safe place in which to explore the matrix of the privileged as we beat on against the currents of our stations in life.Sherwoods analysis of country clubs provides valuable insight into some of the ways that privilege is maintained and protected at both social and structural levels. She goes to great lengths to continually connect the microlevel interactions of club members to larger macrostructures lÓG