Birth Order


The Birth Order Book: Why You Are the Way You Are
The Weird Sisters
The Sibling Effect: What the Bonds Among Brothers and Sisters Reveal About Us
Growing Up Firstborn
The Pecking Order: A Bold New Look at How Family and Society Determine Who We Become (Vintage)
You Were the First
Birth Order Blues: How Parents Can Help their Children Meet the Challenges of their Birth Order
The Birth Order Effect: How to Better Understand Yourself and Others
How to Love Your Children: Birth Order for Parents
Understanding Yourself Through Birth Order
The Birth Order Challenge: Expanding Your Horizons
Everything You Need to Know About Birth Order (Need to Know Library)
My Youngest, There's No One Like You
My Firstborn, There's No One Like You (Birth Order Book)
My Middle Child, There's No One Like You
Daughter of the Forest by Juliet MarillierThirteenth Child by Patricia C. WredeThe Dark Is Rising by Susan CooperSeventh Son by Orson Scott CardThe Magic World by E. Nesbit
Seventh Sons and Daughters
47 books — 13 voters
Down Home Gynecology by Marvin JaffeeParthenogenesis by Den PoitrasOn Birth and Madness by Eric RhodeLabor Among Primitive Peoples, Showing the Development of the... by George Julius EngelmannLotus Birth by Shivam Rachana
•l'OBSTEerTRICkS
100 books — 1 voter

Adam M. Grant
Born to Rebel: Birth Order, Family Dynamics, and Creative Lives
Adam Grant, Originals: How Non-Conformists Move the World

Alix E. Harrow
Better the middle sister than the mother. Middle sisters are forgotten or failed or ill-fated, but at least they survive, mostly; mothers rarely make it past the first line. They die, as gently and easily as flowers wilting, and leave their three daughters exposed to all the wickedness of the world.
Alix E. Harrow

More quotes...