The author of The Wonder of Boys offers an innovative approach to guiding boys through the perilous years of adolescence, offering practical suggestions for coping with the complex biology, emotional upheaval, social ties, rites of passage, and other facets of the challenging years from ten to twenty. 25,000 first printing.
Michael Gurian is an American author and social philosopher. He works as a marriage and family counselor and corporate consultant. He has published twenty-eight books, several of which were New York Times bestseller list bestsellers. He is considered, along with Leonard Sax, as one of the major proponents of the post-modern "single-sex academic classes" movement. Gurian taught at Gonzaga University, Eastern Washington University, and Ankara University. His work tends to focus on sex differences and how they contribute to learning. He is also a co-founder of the Gurian Institute, which trains professionals who deal with the developmental aspects of childhood. The Gurian Institute has trained more than 60,000 teachers from over 2,000 different schools. Some of these schools become "GI Model Schools" and aim to leverage the role gender plays in learning styles.
Took a long while to finish, and it might be my second time. Not quite as compelling as The Wonder of Boys, but still insightful. Just perhaps a bit philosophical to be perfectly helpful.
I learned a lot from this book. Especially being raised with sisters only, some of these things were an eye-opener. I think it could be typed up in a few-paged summary though, because not all of the book was worthwhile and some parts I completely disagreed with. But the good stuff was very good, and useful. I've got 2 little boys and I think I'll apply this a lot more as they get older.
A book that I decided to keep even though my son had left home to attend university. I would recommend it to any parent with an adolescent son. We sometimes think that our sons need us less as they go through their teenage years. This book shows the opposite - our sons benefit from our parenting more than ever.
This book was recommended to me by our pediatrician. It does a good job of helping you understand your adolescent boy. It's especially great for moms like me that never had brothers and need some help understanding how boys think and why they do what they do.
Heavy going in places ( a lot about brain development) but interesting, particularly thoughts on single-sex vs co-ed for boys - strongly recommends single sex for adolescent boys and no dating before 16!
Good book. Boys go through 3 stages. They need lots of help being guided through them. They need mentors. Not just their parents. They need good friends and adults around them who can model things for them. They need to learn compassion. So many things to think about for my boys!
This amazing book provided a ton of insights and ideas that helped me be a better parent to an adolescent boy. I can't recommend it highly enough to do it justice.