Description
Price: $16.99 - $13.17
(as of Jul 28, 2024 09:44:19 UTC – Details)
By: bell hooks (Author)
A New York Times bestseller and enduring classic,…
Price: $16.99 - $13.17
(as of Jul 28, 2024 09:44:19 UTC – Details)
By: bell hooks (Author)
A New York Times bestseller and enduring classic,…
Sally Blake –
More than worth it!
The book came in great condition. This was a joy to read, and has easily become a favorite of mine. I highly recommend this book to pretty much anyone. hooks’ musings about the concept of love and loving practice are eye opening and nourishing to the soul. The only downside is that after one becomes more aware of what true love really is, it stinks to realize truly how little of it we see in our media these days. Hell, it’s rarely seen in most romantic relationships! Reading this book comes with the tragedy of understanding how much it is needed. I find my standards have changed now that I have more of the tools to articulate what it is that I expect of real love with specificity. That isn’t in a romantic sense, but in platonic friendships and familial relationships as well. I genuinely hope that more people will read this work, and that their hearts will be open to it. Rest in Peace, bell hooks. I look forward to reading more of your work.
Aspen Leaf –
A courageous book that should be widely read
There aren’t many public discussions of love in America outside of popular culture — movies, music, books, magazines — but there should be, because lack of an expansive understanding of and capacity for love is behind much that is wrong in our society. When bell hooks noticed that the world she was living in “was no longer open to love” and that “lovelessness had become the order of the day,” she decided to write about it. “I began thinking and writing about love when I heard cynicism instead of hope in the voices of young and old,” she says.The result is a book that’s a refreshing change from relationship advice books that completely overlook the cultural context of love — the ways in which love is difficult for both men and women, but especially for women, in a patriarchal culture; the ways in which a more expansive understanding of love is sorely needed to set things right in a country run by fear. hooks begins by addressing the pervasive confusion about what love is, defining it as M. Scott Peck does: “The will to extend oneself for the purpose of nurturing one’s own or another’s spiritual growth.”The chapters in which hooks names “the ways we are seduced away from love” read as a litany of soul-corroding cultural norms. There is, most fundamentally, injustice to children in dysfunctional families in a culture where family dysfunction is normalized. Then there’s the increasing prevalence of lying in public and private transactions alike, most recently exemplified in the Enron scandal and the priest-pedophile scandal in the Catholic Church. There’s the cultural obsession with power and domination instead of a love ethic. (hooks pulls no punches when she states: “An overall cultural embrace of a love ethic would mean that we would all oppose much of the public policy conservatives condone and support.”) There’s also the vast and unending greed encouraged by a consumerist society. And last but not least, there’s our collective fear of and at the same time worship of death. (What else could explain the great popularity of movies saturated with violence, such as “Lord of the Rings”?)Then there are the chapters where hooks explores the importance of self-love, the reality of divine love, the crucial role played by friendships and communities, the role of romantic love in helping us resolve and transform family-of-origin wounds if approached consciously, the real healing power of true love, and the yearning for love that lies behind the popular fascination with angels. The only topic I found missing from her comprehensive look at love is biophilia, that love of nature named by Harvard biologist Edward O. Wilson. I’m coming to realize that any concept of intimacy with our particular place on earth is sorely absent from most American lives, imperiling our planet’s health as well as our own.Throughout the book, it’s hooks’s personal revelations that make what she says credible and that especially strike a chord in me. I found in her a sister spirit. Just my age, she could be describing my relationship history when she describes her own. And herein lies my biggest quibble with the book: wishing to avoid the kind of disappointments in relationships with men I’ve had in the past, I want to believe that I can find satisfying love with a male, but the many generalizations hooks makes about men in our culture make me wonder. I fear she may be right when she says that “most men feel that they receive love and therefore know what it feels like to be loved; women often feel we are in a constant state of yearning, wanting love but not receiving it” (p. xx).According to hooks, many, if not most, men under patriarchy tell lies “to avoid confrontation or taking responsibility for inappropriate behavior” (p. 36), “use psychological terrorism as a way to subordinate women” (p. 41), “are especially inclined to see love as something they should receive without expending effort . . . . [and] do not want to do the work that love demands” (p. 114), are usually prevented by sexist thinking from “acknowledging their longing for love or their acceptance of a female as their guide on love’s path” (p. 156), “are convinced that their erotic longing indicates who they should, and can, love . . . . [and] tend to be more concerned about sexual performance and sexual satisfaction than whether they are capable of giving and receiving love” (pp. 174, 176), and “choose relationships in which they can be emotionally withholding when they feel like it but still receive love from someone else. . . . [and ultimately] choose power over love” (p. 187). Hmmm. Men, what do you say to this? Can you deny it?”Profound changes in the way we think and act must take place if we are to create a loving culture,” writes hooks. I, for one, would welcome those changes and am working on making them in myself. Despite being marred by unfortunate typos (“Living by a Love Ethnic” [viii], “perfect love casts our fear” [220]), this is a courageous and important book that should be read widely and taken to heart.
Erin Joubert –
Everyone should read this book!
This book had my mind wide open and thinking in new ways about so many things! Would highly recommend this to everyone. As an avid reader, I am a book gifter and I plan to buy this for so many of the people in my life for all the holidays and birthdays.
Kayla Casey –
Amazing
Bell Hooks is awesome I absolutely recommend this book to man & woman! May it bring you some healing, insight and light!
porsche –
loved it
This book was a great read that I really need at this point in life. She is an amazing writer.
Petunia Conejos –
Everyone should read this
I absolutely loved this book, no pun intended. You can’t go wrong with bell hooks, this is a mind opening read. The book covers different types of love, not just romantic love. I re-read a few chapters once in a while to refreshen some contents. I also gifted a copy to my mother who also loved it. Anyone who is a human should read this book.
MarÃa Guadalupe Arteaga Suarez –
Interesante y entretenido
Amazon Customer –
O amor do ponto de vista cientÃfico. Não sabia que era possÃvel e bell hooks fez isso da forma mais didática possÃvel
Sasha –
This book isn’t just about love, it’s about acceptance, justice, truth, healing, care, religion and gender roles. The language relatively simple, yet the book is incredibly deep and precise. Every adult should read this book.