"The argument of this book is innovative and refreshing. And the book itself is an absolute pleasure to read. Alongside his survey of material from James and Thomas, Frilingos incorporates an impressive array of Greco-Roman sources, and the endnotes and bibliography show deep engagement with recent scholarship on Christian Apocrypha. This is a must-read for scholars of Christian Apocrypha in general and 'family gospels' in particular." (Chruch History and Religious Culture) "For scholars of early Christian literature, the book models a thoughtful, grounded approach to reconsidering familiar texts and recovering their latent theological richness with the help of new questions . . . Frilingos articulates with exceptional clarity why it is essential to consider seriously the relationship between the Proto-Gospel, the Infancy Gospel, and the canonical Gospels . . . Frilingos's work may achieve for the family gospels the kind of revitalization recent decades have seen in studies of the ancient Greek and Latin novels and the Apocryphal Acts of the Apostles." (The Journal of Religion) "A clever and delightful book. Jesus, Mary, and Joseph provides a fresh perspective on the infancy gospels by interpreting them instead as 'family gospels.' Reading them together as two family dramas as opposed to separate texts about Jesus or Mary, Christopher A. Frilingos wrestles with concepts such as the ancient household, fatherhood, education, and divine intervention that are frequently overlooked in scholarly research on these documents." (Caroline Schroeder, University of the Pacific)