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Picture of a book: Men on Strike: Why Men Are Boycotting Marriage, Fatherhood, and the American Dream - and Why It Matters
Picture of a book: On Suicide
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Picture of a book: The Myth of Male Power
books

The Myth of Male Power

Warren Farrell
Dr. Warren Farrell has embarked upon an extraordinary mission that concerns us all - to bring the sexes back together. Backed by a stunning array of facts, The Myth of Male Power shatters the singular assumption that most keeps men and women apart - the belief that men have the power. This myth, says Dr. Farrell, hurts everyone - by making women feel oppressed and angry and men feel unloved and unappreciated. It has fueled hate between the sexes at a point in history that would otherwise have the greatest potential for love between the sexes. It has done this by keeping us ignorant of male powerlessness. This courageous book, filled with staggering facts gathered from numerous reliable sources, will empower both sexes to ask the questions we need to begin a genuine dialogue, such as: If men are the powerful sex why are they the suicide sex? (Why are we unaware that our grandfathers are 1350 percent more likely to commit suicide than our grandmothers?) Why did men live one year less than women in 1920 but live seven years less than women in 1990? Why are our dads about as likely to die of prostate cancer as our mothers are of breast cancer while breast cancer receives 660 percent more funding? Why do men make more money but have lower net worths? As the only man ever elected three times to the Board of the National Organization for Women (NOW) in New York City, Dr. Farrell has been listening to both sexes for a quarter of a century and is uniquely able to write in a way that both articulates men's feelings and helps women feel more love for the men in their lives. As a man who has taught in numerous disciplines, he takes us throughout history, across cultures, and into our psyches today.He helps us understand why feminism helped us see that God could be a she but not that the devil could also be a she; why the political parties are keeping women dependent in exchange for votes; why conservatives, liberals, and feminists are all unconsciously undermining genuine
Picture of a book: The Culture of Narcissism: American Life in an Age of Diminishing Expectations
books

The Culture of Narcissism: American Life in an Age of Diminishing Expectations

Christopher Lasch
I read this book and thought This is a good book.I read this book and thought I've learned from this book.I read this book and thought Kit Lasch is the bomb.I read this book and thought Man can be as slippery as Saturday's soap.I read this book and thought Man can be as silly as Bugsy Malone.I read this book and thought This is a serious book, with serious thoughts, and serious insights, and here I am chewing gum and popping bubbles.I read this book and thought I really like this book. It's aces.I read this book and thought This book mirrors a society a mile wide and an inch deep.I read this book and thought My mirror shows splintered eyes haunted by failure.I read this book and thought This looks to be another let's see year for the Nucks.I read this book and thought Thanks to —————, I haven't had a decent dump in six goddamn years.I read this book and thought Man is like me, severely constipated.I read this book and thought And when it comes out, it's hard and it hurts.I read this book and thought Why can't I accept finitude?I read this book and thought Ol' Kit fucking nailed it. He fucking nailed me.I read this book and thought Why does everybody talk about me?I read this book and thought And if they aren't, why?I read this book and thought Are my lungs expelling septic stink?I read this book and thought We've seen better days.I read this book and thought Better days can still be had.I read this book and thought Salad days and tart vinaigrette.I read this book and thought My daddy didn't cry, so neither do I.I read this book and thought Not even when he beat me.I read this book and thought I'm lying, he never actually beat me.I read this book and thought But if I was hypnotized, I might think that he did.I read this book and thought I've read most of Kit Lasch's books. They are smart but gloomy, tempestuous like my stomach.I read this book and thought My stomach after Harvey's at the airport.I read this book and thought I loved this book. Does the book love me?I read this book and thought Good stuff, Kit. Merci beaucoup.I read this book and thought In Vancouver the sun can hide itself away for months on end.I read this book and thought Despite this, the suicide rate in Vancouver hovers around the national mean.I read this book and thought I haven't yet erased my map.I read this book and thought I once saw a woman jump to her death.I read this book and thought Cracked me inside like a beat-up eggshell.I read this book and thought To a chicken, an eggbeater is a rooster accused of child abuse.I read this book and thought With that and Woody Woodpickle, I'm always armed.I read this book and thought But I've got lots and lots of books to go.I read this book and thought This is a solid four stars.I read this book and thought Everybody should read this book.I read this book and thought I did.
Picture of a book: The War Against Boys: How Misguided Feminism Is Harming Our Young Men
books

The War Against Boys: How Misguided Feminism Is Harming Our Young Men

Christina Hoff Sommers
Oh, my... So many reviewers giving this book low ratings just because Sommers is focusing on boys, as if she's not looking at the "right" group, even though she proves that girls get almost all of the attention. (A recent edition of the book replaces "feminism" with "policies" in the title, probably as a response to outcries) This book gained some notoriety after a Tumblr feminist was shown burning it into a fireplace (calling it trash) to keep warm. The fact that this important book is written off so easily as "patriarchal garbage" (???) just proves to me that its detractors just haven't read it. The book never attacks girls; it just tries to bring attention to problems that many boys face in the school system. And with the success gap between boys and girls getting larger and larger as the education system panders to one sex, this book desperately needs more popularity.Sommers expands on points she made in her previous book, Who Stole Feminism? another thoughtful and well-researched read. I don't agree with all of her points: she states that emotional stoicism is the way to go and that we should dissuade children from talking about their feelings; while I believe no one should teach children that feelings are more important than anything, and I don't encourage an excess of emotion, one of the reasons that the male suicide rate is so high is that males are discouraged from discussing their feelings and problems because it's not "manly." Anyone should be able to talk about their feelings if they need help. While Sommers obviously doesn't discourage that (she aims more at the assignments where the writing prompts are one long "how do you feel?" after another), I was just bothered by that.Overall, I highly recommend reading it after reading her first book. I highly doubt that the education system will make serious reforms towards egalitarian (or, as Sommers prescribes, single-sex classrooms, which are shown to be surprisingly effective) policies, but it still is an enlightening read.
Picture of a book: The Rational Male: Positive Masculinity
books

The Rational Male: Positive Masculinity

Rollo Tomassi
Building once more on the core works of The Rational Male by Rollo Tomassi, Positive Masculinity is the newest supplemental reading in the series designed to give men, not a prescription, but actionable information to build better lives for themselves based on realistic and objective intersexual dynamics between men and women. Rational and pragmatic, the book outlines four key themes: Red Pill Parenting, The Feminine Nature, Social Imperatives and Positive Masculinity. Free of the pop-psychology pablum about parenting today, Red Pill Parenting is primarily aimed at the fathers (and fathers-to-be) who wanted more in depth information about raising their sons and daughters in a Red Pill aware context. While not an instruction manual, it will give men some insight into how to develop a parenting style based on Red Pill principles as well as what they can expect their kids to encounter from a feminine-primary social order determined to 'educate' them. The Feminine Nature is a collection of essays, revised and curated, that specifically address the most predictable aspects of the female psyche. It outlines and explores both the evolutionary and socialized reasons for women's most common behaviors and their motives, and how men can build this awareness into a more efficient way of interacting with them. Social Imperatives details how the female psyche extrapolates into western (and westernizing) cultural narratives, social dictates and legal and political legislation. This is the Feminine Imperative writ large and this section explores how feminism, women's sexual strategy and primary life goals have molded our society into what we take for granted today. Also detailed is the 'women's empowerment' narrative, and the rise of a blank-slate egalitarian equalism masking as a form of female supremacism that has fundamentally altered western cultures. The last section, Positive Masculinity, is comprised of essays, reformed and expanded upon, that will give men a better idea of how to define masculinity for themselves from a conventional and rational perspective. In an era when popular culture seeks to dismiss, ridicule, shame and obscure masculinity, this section and this book is intended to raise men's awareness of how fluid redefinitions of masculinity have been deliberately used to disempower and feminize men by a feminine-primary social order. This book is the third in of series complements to The Rational Male, the fifteen-year core writing of author/blogger Rollo Tomassi from therationalmale.com. Rollo Tomassi is one of the most prominent voices in the globally growing, male-focused online consortium known as the "Manosphere" as well as one of the 'Godfathers' of intersexual Red Pill awareness.