The creative genius who invented the field of behavioral economics is also a master storyteller and a very funny man. All these talents are on display in this wonderful and important book -- Daniel Kahneman, winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics and author of Thinking, Fast and Slow
Misbehaving gives us the story behind some of the most important insights in modern economics. If I had to be trapped in an elevator with any contemporary intellectual, I'd pick Richard Thaler -- Malcolm Gladwell
A long, genial, often humorous account of the progress of Behavioural Economics by one of its most gifted practitioners. Kahneman has described Thaler as lazy; he meant it as a compliment because Thaler's laziness means he concentrates only on the really important questions that get him out of bed in the morning... this is important stuff -- Bryan Appleyard * Sunday Times *
Gripping... a novelised intellectual history, replete with heroes and villains, triumphs and disasters, conflicts and comradeship... Thaler is a brilliant scholar, endlessly curious, empirically inclined and public spirited -- Richard Reeves * Guardian *
The economist who realized how crazy we are -- Michael Lewis * Bloomberg *
Robust enough intellectually to be a serious work of social science and a proper record of an important intellectual movement, Misbehaving is also fun for the general reader... a good book about an important topic -- Daniel Finkelstein * The Times *
Until now... there has been no account of how the subject developed. Professor Thaler was one of its founders, and with Misbehaving has set this right * Independent *
An enthralling history of behavioural economics -- Rohan Silva * Evening Standard *
Professor Thaler's entertaining book provides an important reminder of both the challenges and opportunities that come from working across the sometimes artificial boundaries between academic disciplines -- Jonathan A. Knee * New York Times *
I would like everyone in business to buy this book and claim half the cost on expenses. The book is so enjoyable, it would be improper to claim more -- Rory Sutherland, vice-chairman, Ogilvy & Mather UK
The remarkable story of how Thaler integrated findings on judgements and behaviour into economics, and demonstrated the value of his approach * Nature *
Richard Thaler not only founded behavioral economics, he's also a great storyteller and observational comic. Have a seat, pour some good wine, and listen as the founder of a field narrates the fight to force economists to acknowledge the human brain -- Chip Heath, author of Made to Stick and Decisive
Richard Thaler has been at the center of the most important revolution to happen in economics in the last thirty years. In this captivating book, he lays out the evidence for behavioral economics and explains why there was so much resistance to it. Read Misbehaving. There is no better guide to this new and exciting economics -- Robert J. Shiller, winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics and author of Finance and the Good Society
Thaler is the opposite of stuffy old don. The findings of Thaler and his colleagues can't be packaged into a pleasing formula because it's the messy stuff of real life, but his book makes a compelling case that when it comes to thinking about economics, we really should put ourselves into the equation * Esquire *
Thaler has written what will come to be regarded as the subject's bible. Captivating and comprehensive, it narrates the battle he has fought, and largely won, to force economists to acknowledge that human beings misbehave * Prospect *
A compelling blend of personal memoir and intellectual history, telling the story of how even as a doctoral student, Thaler was obsessed with the refusal of ordinary people to behave as economic models predicted * Management Today *
A spry account of his field...pleasingly, and even exuberantly, done * Kirkus Reviews *