Home :: Books :: Parenting & Families  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families

Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Men on Divorce: The Other Side of the Story

Men on Divorce: The Other Side of the Story

List Price: $22.00
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A good effort
Review: A mixed bag of essays by men about how they've viewed their divorce, or divorces. Almost all are written many years after the event, allowing some life perspective on the very complex, all too common experience of divorce. I found it very refreshing to read men's largely unheard feelings on this subject.

This is a follow up to the editors first compilation titled "Women on Divorce: A Bedside Companion." Why women's essays about their divorce are a "bedside companion" while men's feelings on the subject are seen as a second thought and "the other side of the story" I found telling of the editors mindset and sadly the prevailing societal notion that women's feelings are valued more than men's.

I noticed that the essays were slanted mostly towards men who led a life of extreme womanizing and numerous relationships after their divorces. This doesn't resonate with my experience of the other divorced men I know.

The editors have put together an interesting read and deserve credit for acknowledging the experience divorce has on men. I could easily have passed on some of the selections, but the following alone I found worth the cost of the book:

- Michael Ventura's "The Ex-Files" speaks eloquently to the specific loss and guilt that is divorce, and on the unresolved feelings we carry around. "Let's not pretend that divorce is anything but failure... Whether it was reckless or silly or inspired (or all of the above), it was still important... You hurt others, you got hurt, and you failed... Of course, failure is not confined to divorce. Many a marriage is a walking failure - people joined in a pact not to know themselves or one another, who try to pull that not-knowing around themselves like a shield against the world."

-Michael Ryan's "How to Get Divorced" absolutely killed me. A completely sarcastic guide book for how to wreck a marriage. Example: "If something about your wife bothers you, speak right up! There's really no good reason why your wife can't be better in every way, if only she would try harder. Scrutinize her aloud on a daily basis." And "Stop Having Fun! This is tricky, because you and your wife probably wouldn't have gotten married in the first place unless you had been having at least a little fun together." But his best advice for ruining your marriage is "When in doubt, be selfish!" It allowed me to totally laugh at my own divorce and my role in messing up the marriage.

-Daniel Asa Rose has a great essay about the love/hate/grief that he has for his ex, and how his promiscuity hides the fact that at heart he's a one woman man.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A good effort
Review: A mixed bag of essays by men about how they've viewed their divorce, or divorces. Almost all are written many years after the event, allowing some life perspective on the very complex, all too common experience of divorce. I found it very refreshing to read men's largely unheard feelings on this subject.

This is a follow up to the editors first compilation titled "Women on Divorce: A Bedside Companion." Why women's essays about their divorce are a "bedside companion" while men's feelings on the subject are seen as a second thought and "the other side of the story" I found telling of the editors mindset and sadly the prevailing societal notion that women's feelings are valued more than men's.

I noticed that the essays were slanted mostly towards men who led a life of extreme womanizing and numerous relationships after their divorces. This doesn't resonate with my experience of the other divorced men I know.

The editors have put together an interesting read and deserve credit for acknowledging the experience divorce has on men. I could easily have passed on some of the selections, but the following alone I found worth the cost of the book:

- Michael Ventura's "The Ex-Files" speaks eloquently to the specific loss and guilt that is divorce, and on the unresolved feelings we carry around. "Let's not pretend that divorce is anything but failure... Whether it was reckless or silly or inspired (or all of the above), it was still important... You hurt others, you got hurt, and you failed... Of course, failure is not confined to divorce. Many a marriage is a walking failure - people joined in a pact not to know themselves or one another, who try to pull that not-knowing around themselves like a shield against the world."

-Michael Ryan's "How to Get Divorced" absolutely killed me. A completely sarcastic guide book for how to wreck a marriage. Example: "If something about your wife bothers you, speak right up! There's really no good reason why your wife can't be better in every way, if only she would try harder. Scrutinize her aloud on a daily basis." And "Stop Having Fun! This is tricky, because you and your wife probably wouldn't have gotten married in the first place unless you had been having at least a little fun together." But his best advice for ruining your marriage is "When in doubt, be selfish!" It allowed me to totally laugh at my own divorce and my role in messing up the marriage.

-Daniel Asa Rose has a great essay about the love/hate/grief that he has for his ex, and how his promiscuity hides the fact that at heart he's a one woman man.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Whom are they kidding? The book buyers?
Review: One must always immediately recognize the impossible and implausible, despite attempts to make things appear ordered and explainable. It is impossible for a woman to author a book on man's private pain and failings. What will make sense to a women on this subject is always tainted by the female bias of "how things ought to be" and an ill-placed, implacable belief that real pain is only experienced by a woman, and all causation is by abusive, drunken men. I can't imagine what they were thinking when they wrote this, but neither can they see into a real man's pain and move beyond streotypes. God!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: A disappointing effort
Review: This is a sad book that seems to be written by men to confirm the (female) editor's views of men. I'm a man that's been divorced and have had serious non-marital relationships. I also know many men who have been divorced. None of these essays resonate with our experiences.

If I were cynical, I would suspect that these are professionals writing for a market with preconceived notions, or the editors selected those essays to match their preconceptions.

Jerome A. Schroeder

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: A disappointing effort
Review: This is a sad book that seems to be written by men to confirm the (female) editor's views of men. I'm a man that's been divorced and have had serious non-marital relationships. I also know many men who have been divorced. None of these essays resonate with our experiences.

If I were cynical, I would suspect that these are professionals writing for a market with preconceived notions, or the editors selected those essays to match their preconceptions.

Jerome A. Schroeder


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates