sikkinkmichael

Michael Sikkink Sikkink itibaren Udela, Gujarat 384410, Hindistan itibaren Udela, Gujarat 384410, Hindistan

Okuyucu Michael Sikkink Sikkink itibaren Udela, Gujarat 384410, Hindistan

Michael Sikkink Sikkink itibaren Udela, Gujarat 384410, Hindistan

sikkinkmichael

I really enjoyed this book, it was quite humorous. Even though I found a lot of the topics in this book where "common sense", I enjoyed hearing about them from a male perspective. On the flip side of that, I can also see how a book like this can be very useful as a wake up call to some women who feel stuck in a rut. Sometimes you just have to hear, or read the things your already thinking to make you snap out of it. What I like most of all though is the message for women to have "Confidence in them selves and to have standards. Don't settle for less than what you feel you deserve". It was great hearing a man say this. :0) I would recommend this book to anyone, it's a fast, light read.

sikkinkmichael

I really can't believe "someone" recommended this to me as a "happy book" or at least less depressing and awful than the stuff i normally read about politics. Um hi it's about ZOMBIES. ZOMBIES are pretty depressing and awful if you ask me, not to mention creepy and sneaky and stabby. Eeeeeeeeek. Ok so basically. There are two kinds of people in the world: those who "get" zombies, and those of us who don't. I am in the second group. At least I can comfort myself with the fact that if "the zombies come" someday, I have multiple friends who "get" zombies and will protect me with their well-developed plans for "when the zombies come." I did enjoy the bit where like 200 kids from the Claremont Colleges hold off 10,000 zombies...that's why this is getting the second star. And it's getting the third because it stopped me from thinking about depressing world events for a week. I just can't say that thinking about ZOMBIES was any kind of improvement at all.