Praise

Passionate and intelligent… Good Will Toward Men may help us move away from unproductive divisiveness and empty, simplistic blaming, toward a new gender conviviality. This is a courageous book that steps outside the gender neurosis of our time, offering much-needed, if difficult, fresh perspectives on the efforts of us all to be individuals. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Thomas Moore, author of Care of the Soul and Soul Mates

A powerful and deeply moving book. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Nathaniel Branden, Ph.D., author of The Six Pillars of Self Esteem

A provocative book that makes us take another look at what women really think about men. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Carol Cassell, Ph.D., author of Tender Bargaining: Negotiating an Equal Partnership With the Man You Love

Opens up the conversation between men and women in ways it has never been opened before. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Geoffrey Greif, Ph.D., author of Single Fathers

Good Will Toward Men shows us how our thinking regarding men re quires some change. This book will help our relationships with men. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Jan Halper, Ph.D., author of Quiet Desperation: The Truth About Successful Men

Good Will Toward Men moves beyond the old. tired rhetoric of women’s rights vs. men’s rights. The powerful and intelligent female voices in this book herald a new era of cooperation and mature partnership between the sexes. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Aaron Kipnis, Ph.D., author of Knights Without Armor

An open-minded reading could go a long way toward healing the pain of betrayal felt by both men and women. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — John Amodeo, Ph.D., author of Love and Betrayal, co-author of Being Intimate

It’s difficult to know who should be praised more—the twenty-two women who speak so compellingly and compassionately about men in this book, or Jack Kammer, who had the good sense to interview them. Good Will Toward Men represents a major contribution to men’s studies. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Professor Eugene R. August, Ph.D., Alumni Chair in the Humanities, University of Dayton

An important book, bound to stir controversy and, if read carefully, to stir the dialogue between men and women. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — James A. Levine, Ph.D., Director, The Fatherhood Project, Families and Work Institute

The diverse women whose lively, forceful voices make up this eminent ly readable book all agree on one compelling conclusion: that women can never enjoy personal autonomy, liberty, or equality so long as either women or men remain strait-jacketed by society’s gender-based stereo types. A welcome and needed book. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Nadine Strossen, National President, American Civil Liber ties Union; Professor of Law, The New York Law School

The first step toward ending the battle of the sexes is to listen, listen, listen with compassion and good will to both sides. Jack Kammer’s book presents fresh, thought-provoking material for us to listen to. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Marvin Allen, M.A., psychotherapist, author of In the Company of Men: A New Approach to Healing for Husbands, Fathers and Friends

A wise, brave and long overdue book. Free of malice and ideological cant, the women here speak truths that millions of us, men and women both, will recognize from personal experience. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Harry Stein, former Ethics columnist for Esquire

Good Will Toward Men will create good will toward women. It will help turn the women’s and men’s movements into a gender transition movement. It will help turn the war between the sexes into love between the sexes. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Warren Farrell, Ph.D., author of The Myth of Male Power and Why Men Are the Way They Are

Good Will Toward Men presents the views of twenty-two fair-minded, optimistic, intelligent women who have broken through the wall of politically correct rhetoric and made some judgments of their own. A hopeful, healing book that is, I trust, the start of our next revolution. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Asa Baber, Playboy “Men” columnist

Jack Kammer does a fine job of facilitating the dialogue, bringing out a different perspective without alienating or polarizing the women he talks to. This is a fine book and I hope it’s widely read, because it’s badly needed. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Herb Goldberg, Ph.D., author of The Hazards of Being Male

A great and important book. Good Will Toward Men is a masterpiece that begins the bridging of the gender gap. It is water in the desert of gen- der-polarization and will become a rallying point for women and men of good will. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Douglas Gillette, co-author of King, Warrior, Magician, Lover

This wonderful book makes enchanting reading. The many voices of these diverse, intelligent women make powerful testimony for sanity and humanity. This is an important early step toward amnesty in the war between the sexes. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Katherine Dunn, author of Geek Love

These optimistic and intelligent women break through the wall of politically correct rhetoric to reveal judgments of their own, an almost infinite network of thoughts, associations, and lines of reasoning. Kammer is brave and wise in attempting to strengthen the ethos of healthy masculinity so crucial to healing the nation. (Good Will Toward Men 1994)

– — Theresa Ducato, Booklist

Heroes of the Blue Sky Rebellion offers practical and easy to understand steps for boys who must wrestle with issues created by sexism on the playground, at school, at work, and in their relationships with girls and adult women and men. (Heroes of the Blue Sky Rebellion 2017)

– — Alison Carr-Chellman, PhD, Dean & Professor, University of Idaho College of Education, Health and Human Sciences, Director, Bring Back the Boys

An excellent and timely book for young males facing a world increasingly stacked against them and blind to their learning styles and emotional needs. Especially valuable are the practical suggestions as to what any boy or young man can do to challenge and reverse unfairness. (Heroes of the Blue Sky Rebellion 2017)

– — Judith Kleinfeld, EdD, Professor of Psychology, University of Alaska, Director, Boys Project