About:
Are Women Crazy?
Girls are sugar, and spice, and nice. But then they grow up…
After the runaway success of his feature Men Are Dogs in the National Standard newspaper, Steven Gardner is on a mission to tell the other side of the that women can be just as toxic as men. Every Sunday he leaves readers hungry for more as he dishes on one harrowing relationship after another, with the goal of opening the eyes, minds and hearts of a nation where abuse of men by women is a taboo subject.
But the pressure from all this exposure, as well as from his own legion of personal demons, threatens to break Gardner. Can he be the voice of suffering men? Or will he implode under the weight of his own secrets and deceptions?
My Thoughts
Women Unhinged was the highly anticipated sequel to Men Unleashed and let me tell you this book did not disappoint.
In this sequel, we encounter Trinidadian crime journalist Steven Gardener again. After his award winning series Men Are Dogs, where he delved into the myriad of ways that men destroy relationships, he is now flipping the script and discussing women who become men's worst nightmare.
As a woman this story definitely had a different impact on me in that, we often blame males for the downfall of relationships. What this story did was emphasize that women are more often than we care to admit, equally to blame for break ups.
The book was set in Trinidad and Tobago and what I appreciated as well was some of the social issues related to the family that was also brought forward. Especially in terms of custody and divorce. As a Trinbagonian, this has always been in the public domain, the fact that males are unfairly treated by the courts in custody matters. Most times the court rules in favour of the women. It is something that we have been grappling with a while now.
This book is definitely a MUST read.
In this sequel, we encounter Trinidadian crime journalist Steven Gardener again. After his award winning series Men Are Dogs, where he delved into the myriad of ways that men destroy relationships, he is now flipping the script and discussing women who become men's worst nightmare.
As a woman this story definitely had a different impact on me in that, we often blame males for the downfall of relationships. What this story did was emphasize that women are more often than we care to admit, equally to blame for break ups.
The book was set in Trinidad and Tobago and what I appreciated as well was some of the social issues related to the family that was also brought forward. Especially in terms of custody and divorce. As a Trinbagonian, this has always been in the public domain, the fact that males are unfairly treated by the courts in custody matters. Most times the court rules in favour of the women. It is something that we have been grappling with a while now.
This book is definitely a MUST read.
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