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Sebastian Ritscher
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ONE AND ONLY

Lauren Sandler

Why Having an Only Child, and Being one, Is Better Than you Think

A humorous, tough-minded, and honest case for being and having an only child.
Journalist Lauren Sandler is an only child and the mother of one. After investigating what only children are really like and whether stopping at one child is an answer to reconciling motherhood and modernity, she learned a lot about herself—and a lot about our culture’s assumptions.

She brings a passion and a laser-sharp intelligence to the subject that cuts through the anxiety, doubt, misinformation, and judgment about what it means to be an only child and what it means to have one. In this heartfelt work, Sandler legitimizes a conversation about the larger societal costs of having more than one. If parents no longer felt they had to have second children to keep from royally screwing up their first, would the majority of them still do it? And if the literature tells us that a child isn’t better off with a sibling than without one, and it’s not something parents truly want for themselves, then whom is this choice serving? One and Only examines these questions, exploring what the rise of the single-child family means for our economies, our environment, and our freedom. Through this journey, Sandler has quite possibly cracked the code of happiness, demonstrating that having just one may be the way to resolve our countless struggles with adulthood in the modern age.

Lauren Sandler has written on cultural politics, religion, and inequality for Time, The Atlantic, Slate, and The New York Times. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Available products
Book

Published 2013-06-11 by Simon

Book

Published 2013-06-11 by Simon

Comments

Sold in Italy, Israel, Chile and Portugal

Lauren Sandler's book is eloquent, articulate, persuasive, and whip-smart.

Sandler's thought-provoking - and often surprising - analysis will fascinate anyone interested in how family curcumstances shape our lives.

Provocative, smart, and searingly honest, one and only is a fascinating exploration of what it means to be an only child. Just as she did with Righteous, Lauren Sandler delivers a work of fierce reporting, tender storytelling, and clear-eyed cultural analysis.

Journalist Sandler (Righteous: Dispatches from the Evangelical Youth Movement, 2006), an only child and mother of one, examines research, literature and anecdotal accounts on “singletons” who have been maligned as lonelier, less social and more troubled than peers raised with siblings. Recommended as an alternative perspective on an often emotionally fraught discussion.