“The Palgrave Handbook of Infertility demonstrates how infertility research can intersect with these and other areas of inquiry, and offer fresh new perspectives on our understandings of family formation in past and contemporary societies.” (Jane Adams, Health and History, Vol. 20 (2), 2018)“The 30 essays in this book … cover a broad range of topics in the area of infertility, starting with the very definition of the problematic notion of infertility. … Historians, specialists of literature, and historians of art, for example, will find here a key to read multiple … aspects of history. Specialists in medical ethics and legislation also will consult the work with great benefit, as it aptly frames the topic and opens it to future developments.” (Alain Touwaide, Doody's Book Reviews, December, 2017)