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What I Meant to Say: The Private Lives of…
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What I Meant to Say: The Private Lives of Men (edition 2005)

by Ian Brown

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273861,849 (3.33)3
Are the men you know obsessed with strange details? Do they sometimes seem to have less interest in you than they do in box scores and the history of the bolo tie? Do they become sexually aroused at unusual moments -- perhaps while reading a history of the Battle of Trafalgar? Why are they fixated on cars and heroes and strippers and silence? Do they ever think about anything but sex? Are they ever faithful? And how can a man be so headstrong about not asking for directions and such a wimp about pain? What I Meant to Say: The Private Lives of Men answers these and other questions about the male animal -- whether you're a woman seeking enlightenment, or a man looking for company. After all, there's a lot to clear up. Thanks to the women's movement and gay liberation, contemporary manhood has changed beyond recognition in the past forty years. At the same time, the age-old preoccupations of men -- their unreachable loneliness, the unstoppable physicality of their bodies and desires -- remain as bewildering and mysterious as ever. Until now. What I Meant to Say presents new and unpublished work from twenty-eight of Canada's most thoughtful and articulate male writers, as they map the uncharted terrain of men's private lives. At once touching and hilarious, insightful and provocative, What I Meant to Say is a personal tour of the secret male psyche, but this time it's open to men and women alike.… (more)
Member:pensivepoet
Title:What I Meant to Say: The Private Lives of Men
Authors:Ian Brown
Info:Thomas Allen & Son (2005), Paperback, 324 pages
Collections:Your library
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What I Meant to Say: The Private Lives of Men by Ian Brown

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This book said so much about me, as a man, that I'd never been able to articulate before that I almost found it eery. My girlfriend has borrowed it and she finds it fascinating. It is incredibly honest and well-written. This is about the real fears, doubts, and insecurities that men face, not the men-never-stop-to-ask-for-directions world of maleness perpetuated by Hollywood. ( )
  ajrmacle | Feb 11, 2007 |
This is a book that is supposed to have been written by men for women to help women understand the thoughts of men. Or so I've been told. I was also told that most of the readership has been male. Parts of it are funny. But I wouldn't have read it if it hadn't been given to me. ( )
  colinsky | Nov 2, 2006 |
z to read next
  go.fish | Aug 2, 2008 |
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Are the men you know obsessed with strange details? Do they sometimes seem to have less interest in you than they do in box scores and the history of the bolo tie? Do they become sexually aroused at unusual moments -- perhaps while reading a history of the Battle of Trafalgar? Why are they fixated on cars and heroes and strippers and silence? Do they ever think about anything but sex? Are they ever faithful? And how can a man be so headstrong about not asking for directions and such a wimp about pain? What I Meant to Say: The Private Lives of Men answers these and other questions about the male animal -- whether you're a woman seeking enlightenment, or a man looking for company. After all, there's a lot to clear up. Thanks to the women's movement and gay liberation, contemporary manhood has changed beyond recognition in the past forty years. At the same time, the age-old preoccupations of men -- their unreachable loneliness, the unstoppable physicality of their bodies and desires -- remain as bewildering and mysterious as ever. Until now. What I Meant to Say presents new and unpublished work from twenty-eight of Canada's most thoughtful and articulate male writers, as they map the uncharted terrain of men's private lives. At once touching and hilarious, insightful and provocative, What I Meant to Say is a personal tour of the secret male psyche, but this time it's open to men and women alike.

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