This book reviews the intellectual and political history of scientific prediction. Rindzeviit (criminology and sociology, Kingston Univ., London) is concerned with prediction as used to inform governance, including economic forecasting. The author focuses mainly on Soviet Russia (the former USSR) with its specialized emphasis on prediction and planning.(Choice) The Will to Predict tackles an intriguing and topical issue of considerable interest to his- torians of science, especially the historical scrutiny of the role that science has in modern and late modern governance. It is a well-informed book, rich in ideas and examples, developing its important topic in theoretically illuminating and conceptually productive ways while contributing a selective, but thoughtful and original, analysis of the underexplored, yet distinctive and instructive, Soviet case.(British Journal for the History of Science) Rindzevičiūtė's critique of the intellectual history and current practice (especially in the context of Russian foreign policy and the Ukraine conflict) of reflexive-control theory in chapter 6 is alone worth the price of admission.(Culture and Society)