SuperFreakonomics: Global Cooling, Patriotic Prostitutes, and Why Suicide Bombers Should Buy Life Insurance by Steven D. Levitt, Stephen J. Dubner

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(Hardcover)

Reader Rating: (321 ratings)

  • Pub. Date: October 2009
  • 270pp
  • Sales Rank: 2,813

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Customer Reviews

Okay Readby bookgoddess1

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While I loved Freakonomics for many reasons: interesting research, original, good topics for conversation, etc. I found Super Freakonomics did not hold my interest as much. Although, there were many interesting things in the book, and I did learn a lot about things I had never thought of before, and in some instances more than I'd ever want to know. This book went into way too many details about some...

A Worthy Successorby Fred_T

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"Superfreakonomics" is a terrific, balanced and worthy successor to its highly successful original, "Freakonomics". The authors present in an entirely entertaining and humorous way many different topics. They do so in a way that seems quite random, until somewhere late in each chapter where a profound conclusion tying all the concepts of the chapter together. A wonderful fun...

Levitt and Dubner Have Done It Againby Seghetto

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"How Is a Street Prostitute Like a Deparment-Store Santa?" This is the title of the first chapter of SuperFreakonomics. Dubner and Levitt have once again presented an examination of seemingly unrelated topics that end up revealing some big answers about our world. The Sequel is not quite as strong as the original in terms of presenting ground-breaking research. The pop economics phenomenon...

Super Freakonomics Review by Joshua Choateby turtleJC

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Joshua Choate

Period AM

May 7, 2010

Economics

Miss Alvarez

Book Review

Super Freakonomics by Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner, published in 2009 by Harper Collins Publishers. Approximately 219 pages.

Authors: Steven D. Levitt was born on May 29th, 1967. He went to St. Paul Academy and Summit School, later graduating from Harvard University in 1989. He earned a Ph.D. from...

This would be your standard fare, modest follow-up to a surprisingly successful first effort, if itby jcrubicon

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This would be your standard fare, modest follow-up to a surprisingly successful first effort, if it weren't for the final 20% of the book. Here the authors apply their lens of data and incentives to the global issue of Climate Change. They change the focus from the left-right divide of "whether" there is climate change and to what extent it is manmade to the more meaningful question of...


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SuperFreakonomics

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: October 2009
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Format: Hardcover, 270pp
  • Sales Rank: 2,813

Synopsis

The New York Times best-selling Freakonomics was a worldwide sensation, selling over four million copies in thirty-five languages and changing the way we look at the world. Now, Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner return with SuperFreakonomics, and fans and newcomers alike will find that the freakquel is even bolder, funnier, and more surprising than the first.

Four years in the making, SuperFreakonomics asks not only the tough questions, but the unexpected ones: What's more dangerous, driving drunk or walking drunk? Why is chemotherapy prescribed so often if it's so ineffective? Can a sex change boost your salary?

SuperFreakonomics challenges the way we think all over again, exploring the hidden side of everything with such questions as:

  • How is a street prostitute like a department-store Santa?
  • Why are doctors so bad at washing their hands?
  • How much good do car seats do?
  • What's the best way to catch a terrorist?
  • Did TV cause a rise in crime?
  • What do hurricanes, heart attacks, and highway deaths have in common?
  • Are people hard-wired for altruism or selfishness?
  • Can eating kangaroo save the planet?
  • Which adds more value: a pimp or a Realtor?
Levitt and Dubner mix smart thinking and great storytelling like no one else, whether investigating a solution to global warming or explaining why the price of oral sex has fallen so drastically. By examining how people respond to incentives, they show the world for what it really is—good, bad, ugly, and, in the final analysis, super freaky.

Freakonomics has been imitated many times over—but only now, with SuperFreakonomics, has it met its match.

Publishers Weekly

Economist Levitt and journalist Dubner capitalize on their megaselling Freakonomics with another effort to make the dismal science go gonzo. Freaky topics include the oldest profession (hookers charge less nowadays because the sexual revolution has produced so much free competition), money-hungry monkeys (yep, that involves prostitution, too) and the dunderheadedness of Al Gore. There’s not much substance to the authors’ project of applying economics to all of life. Their method is to notice some contrarian statistic (adult seat belts are as effective as child-safety seats in preventing car-crash fatalities in children older than two), turn it into “economics” by tacking on a perfunctory cost-benefit analysis (seat belts are cheaper and more convenient) and append a libertarian sermonette (governments “tend to prefer the costly-and-cumbersome route”). The point of these lessons is to bolster the economist’s view of people as rational actors, altruism as an illusion and government regulation as a folly of unintended consequences. The intellectual content is pretty thin, but it’s spiked with the crowd-pleasing provocations—“'A pimp’s services are considerably more valuable than a realtor’s’” —that spell bestseller. (Nov.)

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Biography

Steven D. Levitt is a professor or economics at the University of Chicago and the recipient of the John Bates Clark medal, awarded to the most influential economist under the age of forty.

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