Review from previous edition The ideas of sisterhoods and brotherhoods are not new; however, these have seldom involved actual sibling relationships. In this fascinating volume about family relationships in Britain and Europe during a 140-year time span, Davidoff (sociology, Univ. of Essex, UK) examines those consanguineal relations so often passed over by historians.
S. J. Zuber-Chall, CHOICE
A fascinating study of the networks that large, middle-class, professional families established in the long 19th century.
Auriol Stevens, Times Higher Education Supplement
Historians and general readers alike will relish this book.
Jane Hamlett, History Today
An intriguing read.
Who Do You Think You Are?
A compelling and pathbreaking exploration of the neglected subject of siblingship. Hugely illuminating, informed by profound and broad scholarship, and also wonderfully readable, it is a work that will be of interest to historians and social scientists of all persuasions.
Janet Carsten, University of Edinburgh
Davidoff succeeds in demonstrating both the strangeness of the past and its relevance to the contemporary world where in the absence of a range of siblings young people begin to think of their friends as part of their family.
Hugh Cunningham, Journal of Social History