Radioactive Dixie is a dynamic, engaging, and very needed addition to the field of energy history that shows how communities and environments in the American South were integral to the strange story of mid century nuclear research and development. -- Sarah Stanford-McIntyre * author of Natural Risk: An Environmental History of West Texas Oil and the Rise of Sunbelt Texas * Caroline Peytons cogent, deeply-researched narrative shows us how closely the political and economic ambitions of the postwar U.S. South were tied to the atom and its promises of growth, abundance, and prosperity. -- Jacob Darwin Hamblin * author of The Wretched Atom: Americas Global Gamble with Peaceful Nuclear Technology * Caroline Rose Peytons provocative book explores the nuclear history of American South, and its waste facilities and power stations in Kentucky, Tennessee, South Carolina, and Mississippi. She deftly mixes the threads of political, social, and environmental history in showing how nuclear facilities promised jobs, a higher standard of living, and an end to poverty, but were bedeviled by huge construction delays, costly cancellations, and safety risks that fell unevenly on rural residents and provoked extensive local protest. -- Paul Josephson * professor emeritus, Colby College, Waterville, Maine * Peyton details an importantand missingchapter in the history of Americas experience with nuclear power by focusing on the region with the greatest concentration of nuclear power plants. -- Robert Lifset * Donald Keith Jones Associate Professor of Honors, University of Oklahoma *