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Hunt, Gather, Parent: What Ancient Cultures Can Teach Us About the Lost Art of Raising Happy, Helpful Little Humans Audible Audiobook – Unabridged

4.7 out of 5 stars 3,971 ratings

New York Times Best Seller

The oldest cultures in the world have mastered the art of raising happy, well-adjusted children. What can we learn from them?

Hunt, Gather, Parent is full of smart ideas that I immediately wanted to force on my own kids.” (Pamela Druckerman, The New York Times Book Review)

When Dr. Michaeleen Doucleff becomes a mother, she examines the studies behind modern parenting guidance and finds the evidence frustratingly limited and the conclusions often ineffective. Curious to learn about more effective parenting approaches, she visits a Maya village in the Yucatán Peninsula. There she encounters moms and dads who parent in a totally different way than we do - and raise extraordinarily kind, generous, and helpful children without yelling, nagging, or issuing timeouts. What else, Doucleff wonders, are Western parents missing out on?

In Hunt, Gather, Parent, Doucleff sets out with her three-year-old daughter in tow to learn and practice parenting strategies from families in three of the world’s most venerable communities: Maya families in Mexico, Inuit families above the Arctic Circle, and Hadzabe families in Tanzania. She sees that these cultures don’t have the same problems with children that Western parents do. Most strikingly, parents build a relationship with young children that is vastly different from the one many Western parents develop - it’s built on cooperation instead of control, trust instead of fear, and personalized needs instead of standardized development milestones.

Maya parents are masters at raising cooperative children. Without resorting to bribes, threats, or chore charts, Maya parents rear loyal helpers by including kids in household tasks from the time they can walk. Inuit parents have developed a remarkably effective approach for teaching children emotional intelligence. When kids cry, hit, or act out, Inuit parents respond with a calm, gentle demeanor that teaches children how to settle themselves down and think before acting. Hadzabe parents are world experts on raising confident, self-driven kids with a simple tool that protects children from stress and anxiety, so common now among American kids.

Not only does Doucleff live with families and observe their techniques firsthand, she also applies them with her own daughter, with striking results. She learns to discipline without yelling. She talks to psychologists, neuroscientists, anthropologists, and sociologists and explains how these strategies can impact children’s mental health and development. Filled with practical takeaways that parents can implement immediately, Hunt, Gather, Parent helps us rethink the ways we relate to our children, and reveals a universal parenting paradigm adapted for American families.

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Product details

Listening Length 11 hours and 11 minutes
Author Michaeleen Doucleff
Narrator Michaeleen Doucleff
Whispersync for Voice Ready
Audible.com Release Date March 02, 2021
Publisher Simon & Schuster Audio
Program Type Audiobook
Version Unabridged
Language English
ASIN B08CQBB11F
Best Sellers Rank

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
3,971 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this parenting book insightful and helpful, noting how it changed their lives and serves as a wonderful resource for recentering parenting skills. Moreover, the book is effective within a short time and provides valuable cultural insights, with one customer highlighting the author's original interviews with anthropologists. Additionally, customers appreciate its calm approach to parenting, building autonomy, and respectful, loving approach. However, the reading experience receives mixed reactions, with some finding it entertaining while others did not enjoy it.

168 customers mention "Insight"158 positive10 negative

Customers find the book insightful and helpful, describing it as a wonderful resource that re-centers parenting skills and changes lives.

"...in a (in my opinion) dangerous way, the book is really relatable, informative, and fun to read...." Read more

"...kind of person everyone hopes their child will grow up to be - kind, helpful, independent, motivated, and able to tackle challenges and difficult..." Read more

"...We both found it insightful, full of antidotes that show why, how, the response to changes in her parenting...." Read more

"...stories were entertaining and instructive and I love how humble and relatable the author is. I teared up and laughed multiple times...." Read more

135 customers mention "Readability"133 positive2 negative

Customers find the book well written and fun to read, considering it an absolute must-read for all parents and a fantastic addition to parenting libraries.

"...I truly believe this is probably the best parenting book available in the United States." Read more

"...The book is well written, entertaining, and practical...." Read more

"Best parenting book out there !!" Read more

"...It’s a great book, and goes over a lot of the mindful parenting stuff that other books talk about in academia language but here’s the thing these..." Read more

31 customers mention "Calmness"31 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's approach to parenting, noting it helps them feel less anxious and stressed, with one customer describing it as a calmer way of raising children.

"...that feels authentic and helps me stay on the path of being the kind of calm, steady and supportive-but-not-overbearing mother I truly want to be." Read more

"...My six year old is cooking and cleaning, and she is more peaceful and even sleeping better than she has been in years...." Read more

"...It was so helpful, so practical and so hopeful...." Read more

"...pretty easy to get along with, willingly helpful, and my teens get along well with adults...." Read more

14 customers mention "Effectiveness"14 positive0 negative

Customers find the book effective, with some noting it works wonders within a very short time. One customer mentions it worked better than yelling commands at their children, while another completed it in just one weekend.

"...Follow the approach. It works." Read more

"...him making sure he’s safe is just effective and works better then yelling commands at him, he is a happy 2 year old and it wouldn’t be without this..." Read more

"...Everything I read and tried from this book has worked wonders with my children and made me realize the frustrations and friction we were having were..." Read more

"I really enjoyed this book and finished it in one weekend!..." Read more

13 customers mention "Culture insight"13 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's insights into other cultures, with one customer highlighting the author's original interviews with anthropologists and another noting its global perspective.

"...in a ton of scientific research and many of the author’s original interviews with anthropologists..." Read more

"...What an amazing experience to live with other cultures and learn from them...." Read more

"...This book is more global and the ideas are simpler, gentler...." Read more

"...So, this book helps parents to take parenting back, take the culture we want back and hopefully, slowly but surely we can raise healthy children..." Read more

12 customers mention "Love"12 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's love-based approach, describing it as respectful and kind, with one customer noting its beautiful system built on love and respect, while another mentions there is zero shaming or guilt involved.

"...the kind of person everyone hopes their child will grow up to be - kind, helpful, independent, motivated, and able to tackle challenges and..." Read more

"...open mind, there are countless tricks to help raise an independent, respectful, and helpful child..." Read more

"...The stories were entertaining and instructive and I love how humble and relatable the author is. I teared up and laughed multiple times...." Read more

"...But it works. It’s a beautiful system built on love and respect and togetherness. And the children respond...." Read more

10 customers mention "Organization"10 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's organization, particularly its focus on building autonomy in children, with one customer noting how it ties well with gentle parenting techniques.

"...be a five-star book and it presents a lot of great tools and tactics organized in a very helpful way...." Read more

"...I enjoyed the illustrations and thought it was well organized...." Read more

"...It starts with free play and building autonomy, some talk, but brief age appropriate questions and commands, not paragraphs of “blah, blah, blah”;..." Read more

"...But it works. It’s a beautiful system built on love and respect and togetherness. And the children respond...." Read more

12 customers mention "Reading experience"5 positive7 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book, with some finding it entertaining while others say they did not enjoy reading it.

"...In summary, it's not a good book." Read more

"...With that said, I found the book to be humorous and entertaining...." Read more

"Didn’t love the entire book, but the tidbits that I did like and implemented in my home were game changers and for that - I still love this book...." Read more

"...And I thought Dr Doucleff communicated her ideas in a fun and easily digestible way. I learned so much. Highly recommend!!" Read more

Great Read!
5 out of 5 stars
Great Read!
I don’t read many parenting books. This was actually only the second parenting book I’ve ever read and maybe the last! Lot’s of interesting insights and techniques to think about raising helpful, respectful and resilient children in a western culture that no longer teaches those values. Not every proposal presented in this book will work for all families, but all families can benefit from at least a few of them. One key takeaway is to get your kids involved in family life and culture as frequently as you can. They love to help! And practicing helpfulness is a skill we all have to learn.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on March 9, 2021
    Ooo, this book was soooo good that I have too much to say and not enough time to write it all! I’m excited to be the first reviewer to have already put these parenting strategies into action and say—yes, this works! My six year old is cooking and cleaning, and she is more peaceful and even sleeping better than she has been in years. Even the baby is happy because we are including him in everything we do as a family.

    I was able to do get these results so quickly because I was already many months into implementing a complementary educational philosophy (Montessori) at home. Hunt Gather Parent gave me some of the context I was missing to make phenomenal changes in my household in literally just a few days. This is an important book for parents, grandparents, nannies and other caregivers. This knowledge is desperately needed in the US today!

    So as the book jacket explains, this is the story of an American mom, Michaeleen Doucleff, who brings her three year old daughter Rosy along with her as she lives and learns about parenting with families from three indigenous populations—the Maya in Yucatan, the Inuit in the Arctic circle and the Hadzabe in Tanzania. The book is rich with first-person anecdotes from each of these settings, populated by realistic portraits of the people she encountered. I loved learning about each group, and I wanted to read more, more, more about the families she met and the experiences she had.

    The book also weaves in a ton of scientific research and many of the author’s original interviews with anthropologists (I admit I gave the book a lot more credit once I looked at the notes and realized a lot of the interviews were her own original work). There is some interesting historical parenting perspective in the first two chapters that upends much of our current thinking about raising children.

    As well, the author was generous in her willingness to share the darker, cringe-worthier parts of her own parenting journey. I think just about any parent reading this book will recognize parts of their own parent-child relationships in this! But never fear, there is help on the way, as Michaeleen shares many macro and micro tips and tools for finding a completely new way of relating to our children. A very high level recap of some of her main points:

    --Include children in every aspect of adult life, including housework, cooking and other day-to-day work, and the children will be happier, calmer and naturally helpful.

    --React with peace and gentleness to children. Respond to misbehavior by ignoring, redirecting, modeling, encouraging, and other kind educational methods.

    --Give children autonomy in a safe way that builds both their confidence and their feeling of responsibility to their family and community.

    I really appreciated that Michaeleen was able to identify some “universal parenting strategies” because I agree with her that finding commonalities among cultures is the way to find what truly works. I think all parents everywhere want the same things, right? For their children to be healthy and fulfilled, and for the relationship among family members to be supportive and rewarding.

    And yet many of us in the U.S. (and probably Canada, Australia and U.K. as well), have completely lost our parenting compass. We don’t even necessarily know what values we want to transmit to our children, let alone how to transmit them and nurture the behaviors that support them. Do we want to encourage independence or interdependence? Peer social skills or family ties? Shouldering responsibility or following your bliss? As parents, do we want to be our kids’ friends or their leaders?

    The indigenous families interviewed by Michaeleen seem to have settled on the perfect middle ground among all these ideas. Their children are confident, sociable and emotionally mature. They definitely come across as happy and content. The parents seem to genuinely enjoy the company of their children, yet the parents have their own lives and aren’t at all slaves to their children’s whims.

    Now, as for my own parenting journey…I have been on this path for a few years to try to remake our family life and my relationship to our older child. I have read and implemented some of the best of other cross-cultural parenting books that have come out in the past handful of years, including about the French, Danes, and Japanese. Those books were wonderful and do not fundamentally contradict what Hunt, Gather, Parent describes. It’s just that those books failed to mention some of the underlying concepts which are also practiced in France, Japan and Scandanavia—things like family togetherness.

    As well, I have been reading books by Maria Monthessori and her disciples and implementing them in our home for about 6 months. Montessori provides a more detailed and comprehensive method than Hunt Gether Parent for introducing children of all ages to the work of daily life, as well as to the important concept of modifying the manmade environment (ie. The home) to ease children’s anxiety and increase their feelings of success.

    Importantly, Maria Montessori describes child development in her books and explains how the evolutionary purpose of childhood is basically to follow around adults and older children so the developing child can learn how to act, move and speak like others of their group, thus adapting to their culture, environment and time. This is how an Inuit child grows up to know how to live off the harsh lands of the Arctic, and how an American child grows up to know how to drive a car, shop at the supermarket and earn an income through gainful employment. Montessori describes how children have a developmental need to contribute to their communities and families, and how they will become demanding, possessive, clingy or otherwise maladapted if this developmental need is thwarted.

    Montessori has been incredible for our family and has completely changed our family life! Using the Montessori method of breaking jobs into subtasks and teaching by modeling rather than correcting, our 6 year old had already assumed a range of responsibilities from helping to prepare meals and clean up afterward, doing her own laundry, washing her hair, and many others. She was SO MUCH happier and confident after we taught her these jobs, we couldn’t believe it. And as Michaeleen notes in Hunt Gather Parent, we were continually surprised by her physical abilities, such as carrying a laundry basket full of laundry up a flight of stairs all by herself!

    However, our child was still clingy and demanding. She had difficulty concentrating and talked compulsively All. Day. Long. Enter the answer to my fervent asking…Michaeleen Doucleff’s Hunt, Gather, Parent. One of the wonderful ideas from this book we implemented immediately was the Family Membership Card—which essentially says children need to eat, work, play and do everything else ALONGSIDE the other members of their family. Whereas before our daughter had her own jobs to complete, now I suggested we do all jobs together. And she loves it! Using this tool and some of the others from the book, after just a few days she is already calmer and more focused. I enjoy her company more than I have since she turned two! And our baby is getting more attention because there isn't so much idle chatter in the house. The transformation for our entire family has been wonderful, and I assume this is only the beginning for us!

    To those parents who, like me, are looking for a better way to relate to their children and manage their family lives, I think you will find many ideas in this book. But change takes time if you are just starting this journey. Be patient with your children and spouse, and especially with yourself. Little by little, things will fall into place.

    To the author…thank you for writing this book! I can tell it was an act of love, and you deserve many rewards in return. I wish all parents and children everywhere love, peace and blessings.
    589 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2025
    Absolute must read for all parents and even teachers, grandparents and anyone around kids. Totally inspirational and easy listening to. Michaeleen makes you laugh through what you are going through but also gives you step by step answers on how to “wait a minute” and get kids to think for themselves and handle most all situations. What an amazing experience to live with other cultures and learn from them. Listened to it, bought the hard copy to go back and highlight and will be listening to again because there’s so much good stuff!
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2025
    This was a very interesting read. Everything I’ve read before for parenting has been through a Western lens with Western goals. This book is more global and the ideas are simpler, gentler. It’s been eye opening to see other ways and consider what might work better for my own family.
  • Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2021
    While I've read many varying opinions on the book, I must say that the author does pointedly suggest how many years of 'Western parenting advice' is largely untested and based on very little research that can't possibly account for the majority, if even the minority. Then the author herself delves into other cultures, chooses and refines various facets of childrearing and 'family' unity based solely on her personal experience and then writes it to be as scientifically proven as she says others are not while hers bears little resemblance to a scientific study and with those same details that are not reproducible.

    With that said, I found the book to be humorous and entertaining. I wouldn't take this book as a bible of what to do, but rather as a different look at what it means to be a family in only three different families! With that, it becomes anecdotal, honest, funny, and might assist you in finding new ways to understand your child; whether or not you agree with what the author herself says should or shouldn't happen.

    Remember, ultimately, you're the parent and you know what is right for you!
    5 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • lauren
    5.0 out of 5 stars The only parenting book you’ll ever need
    Reviewed in Canada on July 10, 2025
    Such an incredible book. Beautifully written, insightful, and inspiring. I recommend it to everyone.
  • #girlboss
    5.0 out of 5 stars Should be mandatory
    Reviewed in Spain on January 22, 2024
    I love it! This book should be mandatary for all parents. Best book I’ve come across.
  • Laney Lee Science
    5.0 out of 5 stars Fabulous Book
    Reviewed in the United Arab Emirates on August 24, 2021
    I really enjoyed this book! It gives a new take on parenting that really resonated with me.
  • Gabriele S
    5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing book
    Reviewed in Italy on January 30, 2022
    Simply amazing! We loved this book which gives a different perspective on parenting
  • ThomasZ
    5.0 out of 5 stars helpful and straightforward. no crazy theories. just life stories
    Reviewed in Germany on March 28, 2025
    Read it as a parent. Even if you don’t agree with all of it or feel like… sure my kid would never. It at times makes you think and that’s what such books are for. Reflect.