"This is a woman worth knowing. She has given us a highly readable, dramatic account of her crossing."
— Maxine Kumin, New York Times Book Review
"A fascinating and poignant story. . . . Revealing, humorous, and provocative."
— Library Journal
"A searing tale of the traumas and rewards of gender change. . . . A powerful indictment of legal, medical, and institutional obstruction."
— Foreword Reviews
"A tautly crafted memoir of her transition from Don McCloskey, conservative Chicago school economist, to Deirdre McCloskey, power shopper, domestic superachiever, and campy doyenne of difference feminism."
— Ruth Shalit, Lingua Franca
"A testimony to her struggles and courage, Crossing invites the reader to enter Deirdre (formerly Donald) McCloskey's mind as she decides to become a woman after a lifetime as a man, husband, and father."
— Kirkus Reviews
"The very courageous story of someone trying to live an honest life, whatever the consequences."
— Jeannie Marshall, National Post
"That an affluent, upper-middle-class person should be so powerless against a mental-health bureaucracy still subscribing to its offical pronouncement that transsexualism is a 'gender identity disorder' makes for gripping reading."
— Booklist
"A groundbreaking memoir. . . . Mccloskey was one of those people who seemed to have everything: wide influence as an economist and the tenure to go with it, several books in print, and a much-loved wife and children. What McCloskey lacked was something so fundamental that most of us don't even think to be grateful for it: a gender identity that felt right. . . . A really fascinating perspective."
— KERA's Think