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Melding self-help, scathing social commentary, academic exposé, American privilege, fervent nods to the ancient Greeks, and—eye-poppingly graphic—erotica with a mythical creature, Broder will satisfy all curious voyeurs. ["A wild ride from a narrator whose sardonic outlook reveals profound truths about the nature of the self": LJ 3/15/18 review of the Hogarth: Crown hc.]
Melding self-help, scathing social commentary, academic exposé, American privilege, fervent nods to the ancient Greeks, and—eye-poppingly graphic—erotica with a mythical creature, Broder will satisfy all curious voyeurs. ["A wild ride from a narrator whose sardonic outlook reveals profound truths about the nature of the self": LJ 3/15/18 review of the Hogarth: Crown hc.]
Eloquent in its grittiness, this title will do well in modern literature collections, fitting in with the likes of Jenny Lawson's Furiously Happy and Frank Warren's PostSecret.