"An eye-opening cultural analysis, No Home for You Here shows how the definition of the 'working class' pervading the popular imagination in the past few decades obscures this group's identity primarily as workers. . . . This refreshingly accessible book tells the very personal and self-reflective tale of how Rensch came to really understand class as Marxists do, as a relation of capitalism. . . . Many readers will see themselves and their loved ones described somewhere in these brutally honest and relatable pages. . . . The personal, nuanced-yet-straightforward understanding of the working class No Home for You Here offers matters for anyone who wants to understand not just US politics as it currently plays out, but also the prospects for an emancipatory politics in the future."–June Ann Jones "Marx and Philosophy Review of Books"