Mr. Hazlitt has dug deep to unearth long-forgotten or even unknown criticisms of Keynes, published over the years since the General Theory appeared in 1936...Hazlitt also earns our gratitude by including the long out-of-print presentations of Say's Law of Markets by J.B. Say and John Stuart Mill; for these nineteenth-century demonstrations that there can be no such thing as general 'overproduction' or 'underconsumption' on a free market are as fresh and valid today as they were a century and a half ago. The Sisyphean feat of Hazlitt and the other authors in pulverizing and clearing away the Keynesian rubble opens the way for a return to Say's Law and to those economists, like Lugwig von Mises, who have brilliantly built upon that law as a solidfoundation. Murray N. Rothbard In National Review Mr. Hazlitt has dug deep to unearth long-forgotten or even unknown criticisms of Keynes, published over the years since the General Theory appeared in 1936...Hazlitt also earns our gratitude by including the long out-of-print presentations of Say's Law of Markets by J.B. Say and John Stuart Mill; for these nineteenth-century demonstrations that there can be no such thing as general 'overproduction' or 'underconsumption' on a free market are as fresh and valid today as they were a century and a half ago. The Sisyphean feat of Hazlitt and the other authors in pulverizing and clearing away the Keynesian rubble opens the way for a return to Say's Law and to those economists, like Lugwig von Mises, who have brilliantly built upon that law as a solid foundation. Murray N. Rothbard In National Review