"Highly recommended."— Choice<br /> "New Scholarly Books: Weekly Book List, June 8," by Nina C. Ayoub— Chronicle of Higher Education<br /> "Book Nook: Rest Uneasy - Sudden Infant Death Syndrome in Twentieth-Century America" QA with Brittany Cowgill— Motherhood Moment<br /> "<i>Rest Uneasy</i> is an exceptionally well-written, thoroughly researched account of the identification and labeling of a medical problem and the consequences of those labels."— Kathleen Jones, Virginia Tech<br /> "Cowgill illuminates the fascinating and complex history of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) in the twentieth century. Her careful and detailed analysis shows why this was more than a discrete medical problem or a private family tragedy and how its meaning and interpretation changed in light of both scientific studies and cultural changes."— Janet Golden, author of Babies Made Us Modern: How Infants Brought Americans into the Twentieth Century<br />
- "Deaths of Infants in Bed": The Historical Origins of SIDS
- Cause of Death: SIDS
- The Theory of the Month Club: Conducting Research on SIDS
- Risky Babies
- Mobilization: SIDS Activism
- Cause for Alarm
- Sleep Like a Baby
Acknowledgments
Index