"A marvelous new biography... the book can also be read as a tour of the broader debate about capitalism, as seen through the eyes of a man who had an unwavering view from the start... Thanks to Burns [...] we have the building blocks for a less reductive narrative about the marketplace of ideas and ideas about the market." -Jeremy Adelman, Project Syndicate
"To call this book merely a biography of Milton Friedman is a disservice. It would be difficult to imagine a more comprehensive portrait of the influences, hard economics, and personal struggles and triumphs that shaped his life . . . [Burns] is evenhanded throughout and unafraid to critique . . . Sharp and illuminating . . . A masterful profile of a most consequential American." -Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Robust . . . A comprehensive accounting of Friedman's legacy." -Publishers Weekly
"How did Milton Friedman become Milton Friedman? Jennifer Burns offers a definitive answer to the question, deftly blending the personal and professional sides of Friedman's life to paint a full portrait of the man, his ideas, his times, and his enduring influence. Husband, father, friend, scholar, policy adviser, public intellectual, and debater, she provides the full Monty on Uncle Milty." -Bruce Caldwell, co-author of Hayek: A Life
"Jennifer Burns has written what will stand as the definitive biography of Milton Friedman. It is full of insight and excitement, and I learned many new things from it." -Tyler Cowen, co-author of Talent and author of Big Business
"This is biography at its best: a probing, revelatory, and engrossing account of the restless intellect, extraordinary life, and controversial politics of Milton Friedman. All future reckonings with this towering and divisive figure must now start with Jennifer Burns's brilliant book." -Gary Gerstle, author of The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order
"Jennifer Burns has not just written an elegantly crafted and unfailingly perceptive biography of the most influential and controversial American economist who ever lived. In narrating the long life of Milton Friedman, she has also given us a lucid history of economic thought and its outsize influence on the politics of the United States-and the world. This is a book that anyone who cares about the role of ideas in the making of the twentieth century should read and enjoy." -Michael Kazin, author of What It Took to Win: A History of the Democratic Party
"Jennifer Burns's Milton Friedman: The Last Conservative is a stunning achievement. In addition to a beautifully crafted and deeply researched biography of Friedman, Burns has given us an education in economic history and a tour of American beliefs, fears, and hopes throughout the tumultuous 20th century. She shows how Friedman revolutionized both economics and politics, and captures the nuances of a brilliant man whose work is more often caricatured than captured. She tells the stories of the hidden figures, too; the women and men whose ideas shaped Friedman's own, but whose identities were hidden by the prejudices of their day. And she wraps this all into a complete page-turner of a book." -Debora L. Spar, author of Work Mate Marry Love and Wonder Women
"If you love Milton, as I do, for his intellectual honesty and devotion to liberty, you can't stop reading this graceful, balanced life of the man in full. If you think you hate him, I'll bet you also can't stop reading. You'll emerge respecting him, and seeing him not as a "conservative" but as the truest liberal of modern economics." -Deirdre Nansen McCloskey, Cato Institute
"Brilliantly researched and elegantly balanced, Jennifer Burns's biography shows how Milton Friedman-argumentative, stubbornly out of step, frequently wrong and sometimes brilliantly right-became the most influential public economist of his age." -Daniel T. Rodgers, author of Age of Fracture
"Milton Friedman, like John Maynard Keynes, was a political economist concerned with public policy. And both men's influence began in the twentieth century and continues today. But unlike Keynes, we knew little about how Friedman's brilliance developed-until now. Read this book and learn." -William L. Silber, author of Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence
Jennifer Burns is associate professor of history at Stanford University, a research fellow at the Hoover Institution, and author of Goddess of theMarket: Ayn Rand and the American Right. She has written for The NewYork Times, The Financial Times, Bloomberg, and Dissent, and has discussed her work on The Daily Show, The Colbert Report, and elsewhere.