cover image The Nurture Revolution: Grow Your Baby’s Brain and Transform Their Mental Health Through the Art of Nurtured Parenting

The Nurture Revolution: Grow Your Baby’s Brain and Transform Their Mental Health Through the Art of Nurtured Parenting

Greer Kirshenbaum. Balance, $29 (304p) ISBN 978-1-5387-0933-7

“All nurture is nourishing for our babies’ brains,” contends this flawed debut from neuroscientist Kirshenbaum. Defining nurture as “deliberate time spent in a physical and emotional relationship with your baby,” Kirshenbaum explores how supportive parental care shapes infants’ cognitive development. She debunks myths that she says lead to lackluster parenting, pushing back against the claim that “responding to cries... teaches an infant to be dependent” by explaining that newborns lack the cognitive infrastructure to self-soothe and that parental comfort helps young brains learn to relieve stress on their own. Small actions can make a big difference, Kirshenbaum posits, suggesting that merely talking to babies “significantly affects the stress systems, hormones, and neurotransmitters in their brains.” While some of the accessible glosses on neuroanatomy are a boon (“The amygdala is like an alarm for the stress system”), they just as often succumb to vague language, as when she warns that “low-nurturing hormones,” such as “low oxytocin,” make babies more “reactive” without elaborating on what that means. The author also devotes long discussions to disproving positions few hold (does anyone actually see “babies as objects to be managed” rather than “as human beings”?). Hazy scientific explanations drag this down. (June)