Offer has a profound knowledge and respect for the complex economic structures that have built our capitalist system.
Stephanie Dyer, The Journal of American History
Avner Offer's latest sparkling and intellectually pugnacious contribution to his protean bibliography represents a tour de force of scholarship and provocative argument... this is an enormously rich and highly penetrating and stimulating study, based on vast and perceptive reading and research. It is also novel in its substance and approach.
Barry Supple, The English Historical Review
An intriguing book...one of Britain's most subtle thinkers about how we live now.
Will Hutton, The Observer
[A] powerful argument... This is a book that uses the tools of economics to illuminate the myopic lens through which economics views the world.
Barry Schwartz, London Review of Books
Avner Offer has produced an intelligent, original, provocative, and moralistic book which should make historians think extremely seriously about important questions, even if they find themselves in disagreement with his approach.
M.J. Daunton, Economic History Review
This insightful book provides a fresh and refreshing new look at life in the United States and Britain over the past half century ... provides invaluable insights.
John F Helliwell, EH.NET
A brilliantly argued book.
William Skidelsky, Prospect
always fascinating and thought provoking. Offer's range of reference is remarkably broad. He travels confidently across the social-science spectrum.
Howard Davies, THES
In the 1960s and 1970s, economists started worrying about environmental and social limits to growth. Avner Offer has added a weighty new critique to this tradition.
The Economist
The book is an invaluable source of information on changing attitudes and practices in the US and Britain since the end of the second world war.
Samuel Brittan, Financial Times
an uncompromising work of scholarship
Martin Vander Weyer, The Spectator
...diligently and readably exposes the extent to which the past 25 years have forced people in the English-speaking world to believe that there is no alternative to dual-income workaholic consumerism, the "hedonic treadmill".
Oliver James, The Guardian
Sceptics who want some political muscle behind the diagnosis of our discontents will enjoy Avner Offer's account of why more means worse...
Boyd Tonkin and Christina Patterson, The Independent
Offer makes many compelling and interesting arguments that are backed by a wealth of data and analysis.
Charles Kenny, Business History Review
Offer's narrative of a complex and difficult topic is masterful.
Barnaby Marsh, Economic and Human Biology
This is a wide, wise, and careful book.
Joy Parr, Journal of Economic History
Offer's analysis of the complex relationship between economic markets and relationships and non-economic dynamics such as love, regard and esteem, and the impact of affluence on these interrelated systems, is superb.
Helen Laville, The Americas
The experience of reading The Challenge of Affluence is suffused with a pervasive suspicion that this might just be one of the most important books you have read.
Tim Jackson, Social Policy and Administration
a fascinating, ambitious, wide-ranging, freewheeling, and sometimes exasperating book about the perils of affluence.
Bruce G. Carruthers, American Journal of Sociology
[This book] presents sustained, immensely learned, and richly suggestive reflections on questions that have troubled social scientists since the 1970s, and social critics and philosophers for even longer... [Avner Offer] offers lucid and wonderfully complex answers in three sections, each with four to five chapters, as well as through an over-arching interpretation.
Daniel Horowitz, International History Review