In 2013, then-mayor Rahm Emanuel unveiled a plan to shut down “failing” public schools at a rate previously unseen. Citing budget deficits, declines in overall enrollment, and low test scores, the closures were framed as an unfortunate inevitability, driven by objective metrics and Chicago Public Schools administrators’ desire to do better by students “trapped in underutilized schools”. Given the city’s explanation, Emanuel’s plan might easily have been interpreted as a hopeful shift; once their “woeful” schools were closed, displaced students would be routed to supposedly higher-performing ones. Nevertheless, strident protest from Chicago’s Black communities -- sit-ins, press conferences, vigils, counter-proposals, a hunger strike -- captured national headlines. “[I]f the schools were so terrible,” asks qualitative sociologist Eve L. Ewing, “why did people fight for them so adamantly?” To answer this question, Ewing presents an accessible, carefully researched power analysis of segregation and public policy, in the context of school closures as they particularly impacted Bronzeville (a historically Black south side neighborhood). Most compelling is how Ewing centers the perspectives of those most impacted by school closures, uplifting their voices by transcribing public comments and interview testimonies. Such theoretical emphasis counters the long history of the silencing and repression that Ewing uncovers through her work, and prioritizes the community members’ own methodology for evaluating the schools in their city: one that “centers black children and black communities as constituents with voices that matter, and… acknowledges the racialized social system we live in.” Despite Bronzeville residents’ tremendous efforts, all six of the schools represented in Ewing’s research ultimately close, and Ghosts in the Schoolyard then becomes an investigation on institutional mourning -- how impacted communities make sense of the trauma they endured, and how they remember what city officials attempted to eradicate. Also an accomplished poet, Ewing uses lyrical prose as deftly as statistical data to engage general readers and researchers alike.