'With its combination of straightforward clear explanations and excellent and well-produced illustrations, all in colour, this is a concise exposition of the Earth story [and] its likely endings. Altschuler uses a wealth of quotations, bringing to life the histories he relates and keeping the text alive ... He has a strong bias towards the issues that affect life today: the climate debate, the ozone problem, impacts and viruses. Because of this, the book will benefit from a wider circulation that among those interested in astronomy, geology and planetary science alone.' Sue Bowler, Astronomy and Geophysics
'Altschuler brings a passion and attitude to his writing that makes Children of the Stars lively and personal ... [this book] would be a good gift to excite anyone - nieces, nephews, parents and professionals in other fields - about the wondrous connections between humans and the cosmos.' Charles A. Wood, Nature
'This is not just a text book. Altschuler is passionate that it is not enough to understand our home in the cosmos; we must ensure that we do not abuse it and wreck it.' Astronomy Now
'Daniel R. Altschuler ... has written a slim, elegant and richly illustrated book for the general reader that somehow manages to convey the most important concepts if virtually all the scientific disciplines ' Natalie Angier, The New York Times Book Review
'Altschuler writes with such clarity in Children of the Stars that even younger readers can gain an understanding of the complexities of the universe from reading it ... Accompanying Altschuler's texts is a mosaic of photographs so brilliant that they are a close runner-up to actually staring up at the sky on a clear summer night.' Briana Collins, Cornell Chronicle
'... a dramatic and engaging overview of humanity's place in the Universe, the evolution of life and the hazards to its continuation.' New Scientist