Kirkus Reviews
"[T]he author's mission is noble--encouraging individuals to parent two or more children."
Steven Pinker, Harvard College Professor of Psychology, Harvard University, and author of How the Mind Works and The Blank Slate
"Original, lively, well-researched, and wise, this book could change your life."
Lenore Skenazy, author of the book and blog, Free-Range Kids
"Imagine this: Parenting doesn't HAVE to be a chore. Your kids are safer than you think, smarter than you think and besides--you have less influence than you think! So sit back, relax, and read this book with your newfound free time. The sanity you save may be your own."
National Review
"Even if Selfish Reasons to Have More Kids won't actually convince people to have more kids, it serves as both a brief and remarkably well-written introduction to genetic research, and a guide book for easier parenting. The Tiger Mothers of the world would be well served by reading it."
Steve Silver, movie critic for The American Conservative
"[A] delightful book, breezy in prose style, but reasonably rigorous in its handling of the nature-nurture statistics."
Wall Street Journal
"Despite its wickedly subversive premise, Mr. Caplan's book is cheery and intellectually honest.... And the bedrock of his argument is solid: Modern parenting is insane. Children do not need most of what we buy them. So, yes, the "price" of children is artificially high.... The best argument for children isn't that they will make you happy or your life fun but that parenthood provides purpose for a well-lived life."
Motoko Rich, New York Times
"Mr. Caplan, who has already been dubbed the 'Un-Tiger Mom, ' writes, 'While healthy, smart, happy, successful, virtuous parents tend to have matching offspring, the reason is largely nature, not nurture.'.... His argument may be refreshing in an era of competitive preschool admissions and hyperactive extracurricular schedules."
Judith Rich Harris, author of The Nurture Assumption and No Two Alike
"A lively, witty, thoroughly engrossing book. Bryan Caplan looks at parenting from the viewpoint of an economist, as well as a father. His conclusions may surprise you but he has the data to back them up."
Robert Plomin, Medical Research Council Research Professor at the Institute of Psychiatry
"I loved this book. Selfish Reasons to Have More Kids should be required reading for parents--as it will be for my children, who are now having their own kids and getting caught up in the more-work, less-fun traps of parenting covered here. And as a geneticist, I can report that Bryan Caplan has the facts right. Even better, he interprets those facts in a way that will change our view of parenting."
Reason
"Economist Brian Caplan: Kids can be cheaper than you think...so maybe you want more of them than you think you want. He makes the case for this controversial proposition at length in his fascinating and well-argued new book Selfish Reasons to Have More Kids: Why Being a Great Parent is Less Work and More Fun Than You Think."