[2] She also authored several books in child psychiatry and psychology with her husband, Stanley I. Greenspan.
These include The Clinical Interview of the Child, McGraw-Hill (New York, NY), 1981, 3rd edition, American Psychiatric Press (Washington, DC), 2003, First Feelings: Milestones in the Emotional Development of Your Baby and Child, Viking (New York, NY), 1985, and The Essential Partnership: How Parents and Children Can Meet the Emotional Challenges of Infancy and Childhood, Viking (New York, NY), 1989.
The biography, Atomic Spy: The Dark Lives of Klaus Fuchs (Viking, May 12, 2020) is a non-fictional account of how the spy risked extreme torture and death by the Gestapo to fight the Nazis in 1932–33 and handing the plans for the plutonium bomb to the Russians in 1945, which ultimately resulted in the Cold War between 1947 and 1991.
[6] In his 2005 review of Greenspan's book The End of the Certain World: The Life and Science of Max Born: The Nobel Physicist Who Ignited the Quantum Revolution, David C. Cassidy (Biography, fall, 2005, David C. Cassidy, review of The End of the Certain World, p. 372) wrote "It is a powerful story" and it "is well told".
The book's review in Publishers Weekly wrote "This empathetic work, Greenspan's first solo effort, lifts a deserving figure out of semi-obscurity and adds a valuable perspective on the origin of modern physics."