"An informed, sometimes acute, polemic against capitalism's half-millennium of colonial exploitation."-- "Nature"
"Any good dialectical analysis lives or dies by its synthesis, and Patel and Moore's is spot on. Particularly, the concept of cheap lives stands out as a novel way to tie the important threads of critical thought on capitalism's history into a coherent tapestry of how it persists, as well as a way to comprehend and resist capitalism in 2017."-- "Los Angeles Review of Books"
"A provocative and highly readable guide to the early centuries of capitalism."-- "Resilience"
"An intriguing approach to analyzing today's planetary emergencies. . . . Nicely blends ecological research with broad stroke history to demonstrate how humans have invented strategies to make the world safe for capitalism."-- "Library Journal"
"Recommended Weekend Reading"-- "Food Politics"
"Compelling and capacious. . . . At seemingly every turn, Seven Cheap Things gestures to a potentially broader discourse that should embolden readers and scholars to view networks of exchange in new--and even 'revolutionary'--ways."-- "CENHS Blog"
"Sweeping erudition, and an impressive ability to synthesize disparate elements."-- "The Guardian"
"Offers a way of imagining, if not completely grasping, what it means to be fully human. The authors help us see what it is to be material in a world of ideas, and to be cultural in a world of matter."-- "Journal of World History"
"A History of the World in Seven Cheap Things offers us a powerful . . . critical analysis and a glimpse of what the world might become."-- "Social Policy Magazine"