"This is a woman worth knowing. She has given us a highly readable, dramatic account of her crossing."--Maxine Kumin "New York Times Book Review"
"A tautly crafted memoir of her transition from Don McCloskey, conservative Chicago school economist, to Deirdre McCloskey, power shopper, domestic superachiever, and campy doyenne of difference feminism." --Ruth Shalit "Lingua Franca"
"The very courageous story of someone trying to live an honest life, whatever the consequences."--Jeannie Marshall "National Post"
"A fascinating and poignant story. . . . Revealing, humorous, and provocative."-- "Library Journal"
"A searing tale of the traumas and rewards of gender change. . . . A powerful indictment of legal, medical, and institutional obstruction."-- "Foreword Reviews"
"A testimony to her struggles and courage, Crossing invites the reader to enter Deirdre (formerly Donald) McCloskey's mind as she decides to become a woman after a lifetime as a man, husband, and father." -- "Kirkus Reviews"
"That an affluent, upper-middle-class person should be so powerless against a mental-health bureaucracy still subscribing to its offical pronouncement that transsexualism is a 'gender identity disorder' makes for gripping reading."-- "Booklist"
"A groundbreaking memoir. . . . Mccloskey was one of those people who seemed to have everything: wide influence as an economist and the tenure to go with it, several books in print, and a much-loved wife and children. What McCloskey lacked was something so fundamental that most of us don't even think to be grateful for it: a gender identity that felt right. . . . A really fascinating perspective."
-- "KERA's Think"