As astounding as the quality of the science is that the publishers have given us as much colour as needed and as many equations (mostly in the appendices for the calculus-minded) for the price of a good dinner (without wine). I paid for my copy (at a Springer-editor & authors reduced price) and will use it if my department ever lets me teach one of those fun Cosmology for Poets courses again. (Virginia Trimble, The Observatory, Vol. 138 (1267), December, 2018)
It brings you up to the current state of the art of cosmology, it is educational and you even more appreciate the work of the genius scientists laying the foundations to solve the riddle of humankind . a must have for the curious. The mathematical appendix and the index are flawless. (Joachim J. Kehr, Journal of Space Operations & Communicator, Vol. 15 (1), 2018)
Cosmology for the Curious offers an excellent tour of the key ideas in cosmology. It also crisply delineates our empirically determined understanding from more speculative areas of current research. I am currently using it in my introductory cosmology class. (Priyamvada Natarajan, Physics Today, April, 2018)
This is an introductory textbook, intended for first year physics students, with familiar textbook features like questions to answer at the end of each chapter. The ideal market for this book is a student about to start on a physics course at university who wants to make it more comfortable to ease into the course. Delia Perlov and Alex Vilenkin should be congratulated on making a big step towards accessibility in a book like this. (Popular Science, popsciencebooks.blogspot.de, October, 2017)