Reviews

Cheaper by the Dozen by Ernestine Gilbreth Carey, Frank B. Gilbreth

luvandkiwi's review against another edition

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5.0

This book is nothing like that silly movie. It's a true story about this amazing family and this crazy father who tried to do the best he could with 12 kids

mschrock8's review against another edition

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Reading this book made me mad at the movie. In the movie, all the children are alive at the same time. In the book, some of the older ones die before all 12 are born.

tschmitty's review against another edition

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3.5

 
As a child coming from a large family, I was always interested in movies, books, and television shows that featured them. This book was one I decided to revisit from my childhood days. It had moments of charm, a father who decided the best way to raise 12 kids was to treat them as an assembly line along the lines of his occupation. The book is very much a reflection of it's time, there was some offensive language and tones that don't sit well today, but the story was enjoyable overall.

 

penifredrg's review against another edition

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adventurous funny lighthearted fast-paced

5.0

areidbarnes's review

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3.0

Honestly it was exactly what I needed it to be, a refresher. I've been reading some very heavy books and I needed something light. This memoir definitely made me smile and laugh a little so can't ask for much more!

jencafardi's review

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4.0

Humorous book! Will read the second book, too.

lil_zaddy_mango's review against another edition

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5.0

What a lovely book. Charming, witty, joyful, fun. It seems to capture the essence their father even as it describes a day or event for the whole family.
I couldn’t recommend it enough.
God help any future children I may have. They will rue the day I opened this book. The sentiment of this book will certainly stick with me.

mpclemens's review against another edition

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3.0

I'd picked this up from our library giveaway expecting an autobiographical account of the Gilbreth clan, but was instead pleasantly surprised to find it a reminiscent collection of stories featuring the late Frank Gilbreth, Senior. A light, quick read, although the taint of casual racism and stereotyping stands out far more now than at the time of the book's publishing. Warm and entertaining otherwise.

soniapage's review against another edition

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4.0

I must say that I learned from this book because I had to keep looking things up! A lot of the terminology of the early 1900's was lost to me. I hadn't known how much influence Frank Gilbreth, Sr. and his wife Lilian had on factories worldwide in the areas of performance and production. Typewriting also. It's actually an interesting book although there is a problem with being politically correct in some areas that made me wince.

papidoc's review against another edition

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5.0

Cheaper By The Dozen is a biographical account of experiences in the lives of Frank and Lillian Gilbreth, and their 12 children. Frank and Lillian were two prominent time-and-motion scientists/consultants in the early days of the scientific management movement. Written by two of their children, this is an often humorous and occasionally instructive account of life with the 14 members of the Gilbreth family in the early days of the twentieth century. As efficiency experts, Frank and Lillian invented the "Therblig" (look at it backwards), units of human movement which they believed could be scientifically combined to make human movement in task accomplishment more efficient and less costly. The accounts of their intervention to make tonsillectomies more efficient, or to improve their bricklayer's efficiency, or many other such experiences are hilarious!