"Loving and Hating Mathematics, by Reuben Hersh and Vera John-Steiner: Mathematicians also happen to be full of emotion."---Tyler Cowen, New York Times Magazine
"Mathematics gets a bad press. Its practitioners are often portrayed as aloof hyper-rationalists with oodles of logic but no emotional intelligence. Not so, say mathematician Reuben Hersh and linguist Vera John-Steiner. Focusing on the emotional side of the discipline, they reveal mathematicians' passions, collaborations and love affairs. The stories range from those who sought solace in equations to some who were driven to murder by a maths obsession."-- "Nature"
"Wisely used, the book could infuse the important issue of students' emotions into debates about mathematics education."---Lynn Arthur Steen, Science
"The volume is quite entertaining, surprising in parts, and mostly convincing in its myth-demolition assignment."-- "Library Journal"
"A book rescuing the full humanity of mathematicians from misleading stereotypes."-- "Booklist"
"Provocative. . . . This thoroughly entertaining book highlights vitally important issues."---Tony Mann, Times Higher Education
"I do recommend the work to the interested mathematics observer . . . especially if you already love mathematics."-- "Math-Frolic blog"
"There's material for a thousand movie scripts in the vignettes--warm, funny, tragic or horrifying--that stud the pages of Loving and Hating Mathematics. . . . [The authors] aim to put a human face on the impulses that drive us to--or from--math. . . . The book offers insights into an important world invisible to many of us."-- "Albuquerque Journal"
"The book is heady with mathematical aha moments and will serve brilliantly as a virtual support group for mathematicians who feel isolated by the false notion that mathematicians are isolated."-- "Santa Fe New Mexican"
"When it comes to the culture of mathematics, there are a few books by mathematicians, aimed at a general audience, that are extremely popular with mathematics faculty. As these books have aged, dozens more have appeared that reproduce some of their best quotes and anecdotes. Fortunately, Hersh and John-Steiner have gone beyond these classic sources and made use of many others. They have also included their own insights so that even an interested individual with a broad background will find much that is new in this up-to-date volume--enough to easily justify purchasing the work. For someone with a more limited exposure to popular mathematics, their book is even better."-- "Choice"
"An entertaining, useful, and provocative book."---Anthony G. O'Farrell, Irish Mathematical Society Bulletin
"The inner circle of pure mathematicians will respond to the book with delight."---Philip J. Davis, SIAM News
"The descriptions in Loving and Hating are sympathetic and understandable. The lives that Hersh and John-Steiner have led have allowed them to get up-close and personal with a species (mathematicians, and more generally people whose work is creative thinking) whose world many people don't ordinarily get to see, and may welcome a window into."---Jonathan M. Borwein and Judy-anne Osborn, Mathematical Intelligencer
"[Loving and Hating Mathematics] . . . is easy to read; one does not need a degree in mathematics to make sense of the content. A major strength is the attention given to mathematicians of different nationalities, genders, and ethnicities. . . . I recommend this book to all mathematicians and mathematics educators."-- "Mathematics Teacher"
"One can expect this book to become a classic."---Robert E. O'malley, Jr, SIAM Review
"Loving and Hating is a book filled with gems. We could open it on any page and find something interesting. It is imbued with the authors' love of mathematics and respect for people. The message that mathematics is a fundamentally human activity, in which people can find meaning and joy, is clearly conveyed."---Jonathan M. Borwein and Judy-Anne Osborn, Mathematical Intelligencer
"This is a marvelous book. . . . On the pages of this book there is always something more to keep one from putting it down. . . . This deftly written exploration of the strengths and foibles of mathematicians we see that on the whole mathematicians may not be all that different from those who have intellectually gone in other directions. Doing mathematics, like many other professional endeavors, is a human activity. Reading this book is unfailingly informative--it's also a lot of fun to read."---Gerald L. Alexanderson, American Mathematical Monthly