Ask your local bookstore for my new book (co-authored with Grady Klein), or you can order it for just $12.21 from Amazon.com or B&N.
PS to buyers and bloggers: Please use the links above (at no extra cost to you, a few more pennies go to me instead of Jeff Bezos) and if you want to qualify for Amazon’s free shipping try buying two copies plus some glue sticks or pens or a bamboo spatula :)
Scroll down for excerpts, reviews, information for teachers, updates on foreign translations, and corrections.
Spring 2010 comedy/book tour
Details here when available, but in general I do gigs year-round if I can fit them into my teaching schedule—so contact me to bring economics comedy to your high school, college, corporate event, or comedy club! If you are with a public high school or community college or otherwise looking for a free show, click here.
Excerpts
The Table of Contents and front and back covers are available for download as a hi-res PDF, and you can click below to read one of my favorite chapters!
Reviews
From the back cover of the book:
- “Learning economics should be fun. Klein and Bauman make sure that it is.” —N. Gregory Mankiw, Professor of Economics, Harvard University, and author of Principles of Economics
- “Hilarity and economics are not often found together, but this book has a lot of both. It also does a great job of explaining important economic concepts simply, accurately, and entertainingly—quite a feat.” —Eric Maskin, Nobel Laureate in Economics
- “Bauman and Klein present solid basic economics in a brilliant cartoon wrapper. The authors successfully shine a happy light on the dismal science.” —Hugo Sonnenschein, Distinguished Service Professor and President Emeritus, University of Chicago
- “This is a seriously funny book! Klein and Bauman offer an enlightening and entertaining look at why our day-to-day choices matter and how they all combine. Students will find this a great addition to their textbooks, and critics of the discipline will learn what economics is really about.” —Diane Coyle, author of The Soulful Science
- “Had Art Spiegelman and John Maynard Keynes collaborated on a comic book on economics, they could only have dreamed of coming up with something this good.” —Jonathan A. Shayne, a.k.a. Merle Hazard, country singer and founder of Shayne & Co., LLC
Reviews on the web (I’ll add more as they cross my desk) include more from Greg Mankiw (”a painless way to learn economics”), kind words from marginalrevolution’s Tyler Cowen (”the next step in economics education”), a nice review in the Boston Globe (”uproariously funny, practical, and relevant”), another nice review in the Boston Globe (”a warp-speed, entertaining and enlightening journey through the basics”), and a mostly critical review from Bryan Caplan (with responses here and here, including my final 2 cents in the comments section).
Information for teachers
If you ‘re a college or high school instructor looking to adopt the book for a class and you don’t want to shell out $12.21 you can click here to get a desk copy (free if you order 20 copies) or an examination copy (just $3 :). Send a note on school letterhead to the address in the link and ask for a copy of “The cartoon introduction to economics, Volume One, ISBN 978-0809094813.” Also FYI the cartoon book is available at a steep discount as part of a Worth Publishers package deal with micro principles texts (Krugman/Wells, Cowen/Tabbarok, or Stone) or with Harrington’s book on game theory. For more on the Worth Publishers package deal please contact Elizabeth Buckley at ebuckley at worthpub.com.
Foreign language translations
Translations are coming in the 2011-2012 time frame for versions in German, Japanese, Korean, Indonesian, simplified Chinese and complex Chinese! (For the simplified Chinese version, I’ve suggested as a working title The Cartoon Introduction to Socialism with Chinese Characteristics :)
Corrections
- Steve Pratt (a self-described “Father, Husband, Fisherman, Churchgoer, and Economist” from Anchorage, Alaska) writes that there’s a mistake on page 13 (“The metaphor of the invisible hand was coined by Adam Smith in 1776…”) because Adam Smith first mentioned the Invisible Hand in The Theory of Moral Sentiments, which dates from 1759. This is absolutely correct, at least if Wikipedia is to be believed.
What a wonderful teacher you must be, sorry prof. I believe using music or comedy to teach are the most powerful ways to achieving the best outcome. The other day I watched a teacher teaching 8 year olds using a guitar and singing all their tables and sounds, it was amazing the pupils bar none danced and sang all the 12 tables and sounds, if only all teachers has this ability to have children adore their lessons and teacher. But she was an inspiration and happily my future daughter-in-law. I hope to persuade my daughter to buy your book. She has two approaching Economics as a subject. Thank you for being so amazing. Lyn
Hi Yorum,
I am an assistant professor and will probably use your book for my principles classes, except one problem. I teach macro. Are you planning a volume 2? If so, when we it be published. I loved volume 1.
Thanks.
YB: We’re working on it! But it won’t be before 2011…
As an economist, what’s your perspective on Amazon’s fight with the publisher? Does this fit into any standard model for market behavior?
I don’t know much about it, but my sense is that the bottom-line issue is whether Amazon is a grocery store or is more than a grocery store. If they’re a grocery store, then customers can always go to another grocery store and so Amazon shouldn’t be able to win fights like this. If they’re more than a grocery store then they actually have a loyal customer base &etc and maybe they can actually exert force like they’re trying to here. If I had to guess I’d say that they’re a grocery store, but that’s mostly just based on my own personal experience: I buy things from Amazon because they have my address and billing information &etc, but it wouldn’t take much for me to switch to buy.com or bn.com or whoever, and if I really wanted a book then I would switch… and maybe never come back to Amazon. Whether I’m typical or not I don’t know, but ultimately I have a hard time believing that Amazon will continue to be successful if they repeatedly fail to provide goods that people want to buy. Just my two cents though :)
Speaking of microeconomics, you recommend making up the ‘free shipping’ amount with the bamboo spatula.
Care to comment on the pricing?
“Price: $6.15
Also available from other suppliers without the Amazon “free shipping”
5 new from $1.99
Curious how Amazon’s price with free shipping is always those few pennies less than the best total price for buying from anyone else in the world who actually itemizes the cost plus shipping separately.
Care to comment, here or anywhere? Pointer welcome. I thought itemizing and disclosing costs was supposed to be an economic good thing providing more information so people could make better choices.