I'm trying to figure out my issue with this book and overall I think it comes down to the (common) situation of: this could've been a series of social media posts (which I realize it probably was).
I put it on hold after a social media post. But the best content was literally that social media post. So. There's that.
The book stays very surface level and reads very young. The examples -- a great idea, one I was excited about -- are bizarre, random, and caricatured. Way too specific to apply broadly, extremely stereotypical in ways where there's no shortage of sources for one liner responses. Some of them were giving "chatGPT creates a conflict that would never happen in the real world with real humans."
And within all of that was a really unhelpful and kind of immature understanding of boundaries. I'm very much team "boundaries are things I do" not expectations I put on other people. Like you can 100% ask for someone please to not do X or speak to you like X but there needs to be some follow up that is ON YOU -- e.g. "if you continue to make racist comments, I will leave" and then follow through if needed.
This book focused too much on educating, or explaining why XYZ comments are offensive, and that's not only often ineffective, out of the scope of the moment, but it's also not boundary setting.
With the examples being wildly blatant and stereotypical it also missed hitting on something I was hoping it would speak to, which is dealing with more subtle, uncomfortable situations where speaking up feels especially difficult. If someone is blatantly being a jerk, it's a lot easier to speak up in that situation. I don't need a book for that. But the subtle microaggressions, the well intentioned conversations, the too-friendly assumptions or questions where it truly ISN'T antagonistic? That's what I was hoping for. That feels more like an area where guidance on boundaries is needed and important. Not with telling racist Uncle Joe that his blatant racism is bad. That's elementary school level. That's a Family Ties very special episode (no shade to Family Ties, it still hits).
I did like the commentary on disruptors and am a big fan of a mild/neutral "yikes."