I considered carefully what my options were after some extended power cuts. I can live without cooling, range, dryer, compressor or lift during those times, so a 120v generator will serve my needs. My house, in my eyes, is wired the most ridiculous way with lights and outlets on different floors shared throughout. I would need almost every fuse in my 30ish-way fuse panel switched on. That would require a large transfer switch and I am not re-wiring my house. I am not on a gas main. My propane tank is 100 gal but it might already be half empty.
I decided on a new larger consumer panel, I needed one anyway for some extra bathroom circuits. This unit is 40-way which had its own specially designed interlock switch from the same company. This is approved in MA. It was all installed by a licensed contractor and inspected by the town. I use 2 Honda gas powered, light (we are getting older), quiet and portable generators that are designed to be run in parallel which are hooked up to an approved generator box. It is not automatic but I can live with that.
We had one power cut since the instal and everything worked better than I had hoped. Lights for every room, heat, hot water, coffee maker, washing machine,etc. I could also still work in the garage, door openers etc. We had to be careful what we switched on simultaneously, I have not been able to find an amp or power meter that suites my needs.
If you set realistic or reduced expectations for what you need powered on during a power cut, you can minimize the size of generator needed and hence the noise output, amount of fuel for a bigger generator, work required to install, etc.
Your mileage may well be very different for your situation.
Check with your town as to what is approved.