In reviewing the articles of this month’s issue of The Gerontologist, I was struck by the compelling perspectives and communities featured. Whether it is giving voice to care recipients in a caregiving dyad (Wilson et al., 2023); older adults in lower- and middle-income communities (Freiria et al., 2023); Black and African American women and caregivers (Bonds Johnson et al., 2023; Suntai & Beltran, 2023); Latino caregivers (Mage et al., 2023); older Chinese migrant workers (Zhang & Wu, 2023); Indigenous and First Nation peoples (Brooks et al., 2023); older adults in prison (Avieli & Band-Winterstein, 2023); or older adults in residential long-term care settings during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic (Boamah et al., 2023), the articles in this month’s issue placed the perspectives and experiences of these participants at the forefront. The richness and ultimate impact of our scholarship will rely on continuing to feature the aging experiences of communities and individuals that traditionally have not received scientific attention. Clearly, our field is making at least incremental progress in considering the effects of intersectionality on the aging experience, and it is with this sentiment in mind that I introduce the articles in this month’s issue: