Men, Women & Children: A Novel
Men, Women & Children: A Novel book cover

Men, Women & Children: A Novel

Paperback – July 15, 2011

Price
$14.99
Format
Paperback
Pages
320
Publisher
Harper Perennial
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0061657313
Dimensions
0.9 x 5.3 x 7.9 inches
Weight
8.5 ounces

Description

From the Back Cover Chad Kultgen, cult hero and author of the buzz-generating illicit classics The Average American Male and The Lie, cuts to the quick of the American psyche like no other author writing today. In Men, Women & Children he explores the sexual pressures at work on a handful of troubled, conflicted junior-high students and their equally dysfunctional parents. From porn-surfing fathers to World of Warcraft-obsessed sons, from competitive cheerleaders to their dissatisfied, misguided mothers, Kultgen clicks open the emotionally treacherous culture in which we live—in his most ambitious and surprising book yet. About the Author Chad Kultgen is a graduate of the USC School of Cinematic Arts. His novels include The Average American Male , The Average American Marriage , The Lie , and Men, Women & Children , the basis of a feature film by Jason Reitman. He lives in California. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Men, Women & Children A Novel By Chad Kultgen Harper Perennial Copyright © 2011 Chad KultgenAll right reserved. ISBN: 9780061657313 Chapter One Don Truby thought about Kelly Ripa?s anus. He thought about what it would look like as he slid his penis into it. This image was all he could focus on in the forty-five minutes he had left of his dwindling lunch break. He took the largest bites he could from a Big Mac as he drove home, averaging ten miles over the speed limit. He felt both anxiety and shame about the frantic level of effort he was willing to exert in order to create a fifteen or twenty minute window in which he could masturbate. He allayed these concerns by reminding himself what his doctor told him a few weeks earlier during his annual physical: that, for every year a man lives past fifty, his chance of having some kind of prostate trouble, cancerous or otherwise, increased by 5 percent. And to combat these odds, his doctor added, it was wise to maintain as healthy a prostate as could be managed, which meant employing it in the creation of ejaculate as often as possible. Don was only thirty-seven, but he rationalized that regular masturbation could be considered a form of preventative medicine. This rationalization sustained him through the rest of his drive home. With roughly thirty-five minutes left in his lunch break, Don entered his house. By then, his mode of excuse had moved from medical prevention to blaming his wife for her lack of willingness to engage in sexual activity with him. They had been married since they were in their early twenties and they had a thirteen-year-old son, Chris. Both of these facts were things that he understood could take a toll on the libido of any average person, man or woman. Nonetheless he couldn?t help feeling that, in the past year, something had changed. The frequency of their sexual encounters had dwindled to once every month and a half, and his wife, Rachel, seemed completely uninterested in and unwilling to offer him fellatio or manual release as alternatives to intercourse when she wasn?t in the mood, which had become excessively frequent. Don felt that he had no choice but to engage in the only sexual outlet on which he could still rely: semi-regular masturbation. He entered the bedroom that he and his wife shared, sat down at their computer, and tried to suppress the feeling of self-pity that always seemed to creep up on him at exactly this moment. He reminded himself that because of the schedules of everyone else in the house, these twenty to thirty minutes were the only ones he would have to himself all day, and hence the only ones he could use to satiate his biological need to ejaculate. The computer, which had been idle on the Windows loading screen for several seconds too long by Don?s estimation, reverted to its boot-up screen. Don had seen this before with their previous computer. He knew it meant one of two things: Either the computer was just getting old and overused or it was time for it to be replaced or more likely, he had browsed one too many pornography websites and accidentally infected it with some kind of virus or ad ware or spy ware that had rendered it inoperative. He decided to power the computer off and give it one more chance to make it out of the load screen into some form of operational status, but when he turned the machine back on, the same thing happened again. He wasn?t looking forward to taking the computer to the Best Buy Geek Squad, as he had done once before, but that was the least of his concerns. With twenty minutes left in his lunch break, and no hard copies of pornography anywhere in the house as a result of Rachel having accidentally found his collection some years ago?at which point she forced him to destroy it in front of her?Don gave a brief thought to masturbating using only his imagination. He hated masturbating without pornography, always finding the orgasm to be less satisfying. But in order to get to the limitless fountain of pornography on the Internet to which he had become so accustomed, he would have to resort to something he had never done. What he was contemplating would far surpass any level of indignity he might have felt for masturbating during his lunch break, or at work (as he had done twice before), or in his car outside his own home, or in virtually any other scenario in which he might have found himself in the service of ejaculating. He opened the door to his son Chris?s room, purging all thoughts of guilt or shame. He knew he would have no time for either of those if he was going to make it back to work before his lunch break was over. He had purchased Chris a laptop the previous Christmas, primarily for schoolwork and video editing. Chris had expressed interest in possibly pursuing a career in television or film postproduction, so when he asked for a video camera and a computer to edit on, Don and Rachel agreed to foster his curiosity. Don thought about these things for a fleeting moment before he opened the laptop and powered it up. The procedure Don used to reset the Internet browser history on the computer in his and Rachel?s bedroom had become second nature to him. It was not complex: He simply reset the entire history after each use of the computer for masturbatory purposes. Don knew that Rachel wasn?t savvy enough to understand why the browser history had been cleared. Very infrequently he would have to field one of her questions about the mysterious disappearance of a website she saw on Oprah from ?that little drop down thingy,? but a nonchalant ?I don?t know? or a ?sometimes the whole thing just resets so it doesn?t get viruses? always seemed to satisfy her questioning. He was well aware that this would not be the case with Chris, who knew far more about computers and the Internet than Don himself did. Before he logged onto BangBus.com, the website he had gotten a separate and secret credit card specifically to pay for six months prior, he planned to look through the browser history of his son?s computer and write down each website. He then planned to erase the browser history after using his son?s computer for the five to ten minutes he assumed it would take him to reach the point of ejaculation. And, finally, Don Truby planned to type back in all of the websites that were originally in his son?s browser history, in the order in which he had written them down. He knew of no technique that would have been more efficient, although there were several. His son?s browser history contained multiple social networking sites, a few music sites, some movie news websites, the Goodrich Junior High School website, and a few others that Don wrote down without giving them much thought. One site, however, was unfamiliar to him and gave no indication of its nature through its name alone: KeezMovies.com. With only a few minutes left to masturbate, Don?s curiosity overrode his carnal urges for the brief second that found him navigating to KeezMovies.com instead of just writing it down and opening a browser window to BangBus.com. What he saw filled his mind with thoughts and reactions that were difficult to reconcile. KeezMovies.com, Don learned, was a website that contained page after page of thumbnail images that represented streaming videos one could access by merely clicking on the thumbnail. The videos ranged in length from a few minutes to well over thirty minutes, and they were all pornographic. The website was free and seemed to offer a much wider variety of pornographic content than BangBus.com. Don was immediately reminded of the time he found his father?s secret stash of pornography. He was roughly the same age his own son was currently: thirteen. He had been in the garage on an innocent errand, recovering a wrench from his father?s toolbox in order to tighten the chain on his bicycle. After several minutes of looking for the wrench in various places that seemed likely, Don found a cardboard box labeled ?Junk from Old House? and opened it. Inside he found a dozen or so Penthouse and Playboy magazines as well as a Super-8 film reel. The film reel was the obsession of his adolescent existence. He had no idea if his parents even owned a Super-8 projector, and beyond that he would have had no idea how to operate such a device even if they did. He would, from time to time, when he became tired of using the same images in the dozen or so magazines, hold the film strip up to the garage light and use the tiny still images as fodder for his early masturbation sessions. He remembered most of them vividly, and certainly the discovery of his son?s stash of pornography brought him back to the moment he discovered his own father?s. It was strange. At first, Don lamented the fact that technology had progressed to a point that a teenage boy?s first experience with pornography would never again include the discovery of his father?s stash. He realized that children reaching adolescence would never again need their parents to supply them with their first glimpses at human sexuality, intentionally or otherwise. Don felt a brief moment of sadness about not being a part of that moment for his son, about not being involved in what he considered an intrinsic part of growing up. Still, he was relieved that his son?s pornographic tastes contained nothing homosexual or overtly abnormal. Then he saw the clock on his son?s computer and he was reminded that he had only a precious few minutes left to masturbate before he had to get back in his car and drive back to his office, where he would spend four more hours trying to convince people to invest their money with, or to purchase a life insurance policy from, his employer, Northwestern Mutual. He had stopped, years ago, questioning how his life had become what it had become, but every so often, when he unbuttoned his pants, un-tucked his shirt, and threw his tie over his shoulder in order to masturbate with as little disrobing as possible on a lunch break from a job he despised, his mind would fire off some almost imperceptible objection. This isn?t what he thought he?d be doing at thirty-seven. The first thumbnail he clicked on opened a streaming movie starring a girl he had never seen, named Stoya. She was extremely attractive and extremely pale. Don had never found pale girls particularly appealing, but he knew that if he got caught in the trap of clicking on multiple videos until he found one he liked, he would most likely be late for work and he would have to deal with his manager. He pulled the elastic band of his underwear down so it fit just behind his testicles and applied a small amount of pressure. Don had first implemented this technique many years ago after stumbling upon it purely by chance. He had been lying awake the whole night as a result of his wife pressing her buttocks against his genitals as she slept. He had tried gently grinding his erection against her, as this sometimes brought him to full ejaculation, but that night Don was wearing a pair of boxers that were made of a thicker material than normal, and this just made him more incensed. He knew that the jarring motion of all-out masturbation would surely wake his wife and bring a barrage of questioning that he was unwilling to endure. At some point his wife, Rachel, got out of bed and went to the bathroom. Don took the opportunity to pull his underwear down under his testicles for the first time and quickly masturbate, cupping his hand to catch the ejaculated semen and wiping it on the side of the bed before Rachel came back. He didn?t know if the elastic band of his underwear being placed behind his testicles made his orgasm come any quicker or stronger, but he enjoyed it and from that moment on occasionally employed the technique, especially in scenarios that required him to complete his masturbatory session in a short amount of time. And so it was as Don ejaculated into a McDonald?s napkin, which he crumpled up and tossed back into the bag with his empty Big Mac container and french-fry sleeve. He shut his son?s computer down and put it back where he had found it. He was momentarily reminded, once again, of putting his father?s pornography back in its secret location in the garage, hoping his transgression would remain undetected. As he left his house, he knew it was excessively unlikely that the series of events necessary for his wife to discover his semen-covered McDonald?s napkin in their own trash can would ever transpire. But he saw no sense in taking unnecessary risk, so he threw the McDonald?s bag away in the neighbors? trash can. On his drive back to work, he thought about his son and was again relieved that Chris?s pornographic tastes seemed normal. As he walked back into his office, Don wondered what his son was doing at school, and as much as he didn?t want to, he couldn?t help wondering about his son?s masturbatory habits? when he did it, where he did it, where or into what object he expelled his semen. He gave only a brief thought to what his wife might think of their son?s indulgence in pornography. He would not tell her about his discovery. (Continues...) Excerpted from Men, Women & Children by Chad Kultgen Copyright © 2011 by Chad Kultgen. Excerpted by permission of Harper Perennial. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The author of
  • The Average American Male
  • and
  • The Lie
  • returns with a shocking, salacious, and surprisingly subtle new novel of the average American family.
  • Like Neil Strauss and Nick Hornby, Chad Kultgen has the capacity to enthrall and astonish even the most ardent readers of contemporary literary fiction. In
  • Men, Women, and Children
  • , his incisive vision, unerring prose, and red-light-district imagination are at their most ambitious and surprising, as he explores the sexual pressures of junior high school students and their parents navigating the internet’s shared landscape of pornography, blogs, social networking, and its promise of opportunities, escapes, reinvented identities, and unexpected conflicts.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(85)
★★★★
20%
(57)
★★★
15%
(42)
★★
7%
(20)
28%
(79)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Hit and Miss

No one is ever going to say that Chad Kultgen is a master wordsmith. His novels always strike me as fleshed out screenplays; very straight forward and direct, with little description or clever language. His characters are rarely anything greater than the sum of their quirks, they have no separation from each other in any way outside of what each of them enjoys. All of his characters have the same dedicated focus and they all act remarkably similar to each other, even if their ultimate goals are different. His previous novels, "Average American Male" and "The Lie" both exist in the "fratire" genre, where the focus tends to be male oriented and extremely graphic and sexual. The sex is extremely male oriented; aggressive and detail oriented, with an emphasis on male dominance. That's not a negative quality, it just should be recognized because it can be upsetting to some people. "American Male" was an interesting take on a nameless narrator who aimlessly goes through his life, driven only by sex and video games. "The Lie" was more complex, with a legitimately interesting plot that concerned the college careers of three fairly unlikable characters.

"Men, Women and Children" is a little more restrained than Kultgen's previous works. Sex is still a huge focus, but it doesn't dominate the pages the way it did before. The more general focus rests in the way that the internet has the power to influence people. The internet is a powerful force for all of the characters in this book, of which there are a multitude (some might say a few too many). The internet brings about sexual fetishes, video games, paranoia, etc. All of the characters are eventually affected in some way by this technology, and Kultgen does a good job of examining how these changes are perceived by everyone involved.

And this is Chad Kultgens greatest strength. For all of his weaknesses as a novelistic writer, he has the ability to identify and isolate what a lot of people are feeling and thinking, even if they aren't aware of it themselves. He has a fairly remarkable insight into a variety of ages and sexes and genders, and his explanation of how characters are reacting can sometimes be dead on. In particular, though perhaps not surprisingly, he is very tuned into the mindset of young people. He has a few sections in this novel where a boy and girl are both waiting for one to text the other, and both don't want to be the first to do so, and both in turn are exactly wrong in their thinking about why the other hasn't texted them yet. It sounds simple, but it's such a relate-able moment, one that I'm sure every young relationship goes through.

On the other hand, some of the dialog between the male parents reads like Bad Screenwriting 101. The scenes with the three fathers together is some of the worst writing imaginable, with the dialog for these 40-somethings never moving past the level of 12 year olds.

And that's the hit and miss aspect. For everything Kultgen does right, there's a section immediately following where bad writing threatens to torpedo some legitimately interesting thoughts.
34 people found this helpful
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One star because I can't give it zero stars

If you cannot tell by the title, I was not pleased upon completion of this book. I will say to preface this review, that I found "Average American Male" to be one of the boldest, entertaining and truthful books I've ever read. I found that even I blushed at certain things that were written, but everything Kultgen used only helped to establish the main character of the book. I also enjoyed "The Lie", which although was not AS good as "AAM", it was still a good work of fiction with good twists and the profanity/salaciousness still helped to build this story.

However, with "Men Women & Children", it seems as though Kultgen was half-heartedly writing for shock value. Any description of sex felt forced and unnecissarily pornographic, with no real value to the character and there was no emotional attachment to that character and his/her act. While descriptive pages kept me very much involved in his first 2 books, I found myself skipping over the poor excuse for a sex scene.

Which brings me to my next complaint, that I felt like I didn't need to read a large portion of the book. The repitition of each character's trait/belief/feeling that did not change over the book became redundant. Of the 12 or so main characters, only 2 showed real developement/movement (Allison Doss/Tim Mooney). Kultgen had it right when he had the reader focusing, really focusing, on only 2-3 characters, where he could draw the reader a very real picture of each of them.

Finally, and this may be a spoiler, the ending (no details, but...). Through the entire book, I was able to predict each turn that would happen, but kept reading in hopes that Kultgen would pull off an excellent twist as he had in both of his previous books. However, this one just played out (and not well). No character/plot resolution, clear cliff hangers and a total lack of creativity. Yes you'll be left asking yourself, "Whatever happened to so and so?" But you know just as plainly as the book ends.

If there is any redeeming factor at all to this book, it is a fairly accurate account of the current teenage life. Any parent who spent their teenage years during or before 1994 should read this book as it does depict what a lot of teenagers are doing in their lives. As someone who grew up doing/experiencing many of what the characters did, it was common knowledge to me, but it would be very good for niave parents to have their eyes open to how "grown up" their kids are behaving.

Overall, I do NOT reccommend this book for fans of Kultgen's previous 2 works. Stay away, stay faaarrrr awayyyy.
7 people found this helpful
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Kultgen's Best Book Yet

Let me begin by saying that I've read and enjoyed all of Chad Kultgen's books. I first read The Average American Male about a year ago when my friend showed it to me, and I bought it not long after. With a gift card to a local book store I bought The Lie, and I decided to pre-order Men, Women, & Children on Amazon. I can honestly say I'm glad that I did.

The basis of Men, Women, & Children is that it's focused around several middle schoolers and their parents, who all deal with various aspects of sex and technology. This novel is really a character study more than anything. The characters are all interesting and messed up in their own wonderful ways. An anorexic girl, a fetishist, and a girl with an obsession with being famous make up only the characters, and they are all very well done. I could almost clearly remember my middle school days by reading this book, because the characters seem so spot on. They swear with every alternate word and are overly sexual even though they don't know anything about sex; they are constantly using text lingo and making pop culture references to each other; and most of all they act like jerks to each other in the dog-eat-dog world of middle school.

The book deals with a lot of separate conflicts, rather than a couple big ones. The interesting thing is how the come together, as each of the characters are connected with each other, sometimes without even realizing it, and that is one of the underlying themes of the book. At one point the book talks about Carl Sagan, who explains that our atoms are all connected with each other on levels we cannot possibly understand. I couldn't help but think of A Confederacy of Dunces when I read it, because of how well everyone fits together. There is also some great symbolism: at one point a character contemplates infidelity, an while he does he has to look at a picture of Hilary Clinton as his desktop background. For those of you who don't know, just Google the name Monica Lewinski.

I have to say this was his best book yet. His first book was good for a laugh, and his second book had a great plot that was tarnished by being overly sexual and unbelievable narrators. This book had vastly improved writing, used the overly-sexual aspect much better, and overall was very good. I know his next novel will make the jump from good to great, which would have been the case here with a little extra polish. It is very good, but just missing that extra something that would make it great.

Overall, I recommend this book to everyone. I recommend it to parents, so they can see the dangers of being overbearing or ignoring their children instead of talking to them; I recommend it to college aged guys who have been desensitized because of the internet, because they will get a few laughs and remember what it was like to be a kid; and most of all I recommend it to people who think they have problems, because it will make them feel a lot better about themselves and show them what real problems are.
6 people found this helpful
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Ehhhh

This is the third book of Chad Kultgen's that I have read and it lives up to his standards. Just like the others, it is pretty messed up but sadly I think that is a pretty honest portrayle of some of the families in our society. There are better books to read out there, so unless you are dying to read a sad story that will leave you nothing, then try to find a different book.

I might recommend this to someone, only if they were a cruel person.
5 people found this helpful
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Great read covering many taboo topics

I have read Chad Kultgen's previous books and this one strays from his normal Fratire, but still holds onto his style of writing. At times the book gets a little too sexual and overly descriptive, even for a college male like myself, but the book covers topics from suicide, teen sex, pregnancy, divorce, adultery, and self-fulfilling prophecies in a way that makes the reader reevaluate their own stance. It is definitely a shake-up from The Average American Male, and The Lie, but a very good read anyways. If you know Chad Kultgen's writing and enjoy it then pick up his new book. I look forward to his next novel.
4 people found this helpful
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Meretricious rubbish

If, in the modern mania for list-making, I had a list of the shallowest, least meaningful and most tedious novels I have read in a long lifetime, this one would be very close to the top. The "subject" of the book is the sex lives of a small group of thirteen year old, eighth-grade students and their parents in a small unnamed town in 'Middle America'. The unformed characters of the children are only faintly interesting and those of their self-seeking, sexually-needy parents little more so. I found it revealing that, in the edition I have just finished reading, there is a section of several pages in the middle of the book containing several egregious typos, indicating that (entirely justifiably IMO) the professional proof-reader nodded off.
It appears to me that the author was trying very hard to produce a book leading to a sensationally successful film, perhaps "The Valley of the Dolls" of his generation. Do I need to add that "successful" here means money-making, neither more nor less? Could there be any other possible yardstick?!? And speaking of films, it is a mystery to me why the book has, at the top of the front cover: "From the Director of Juno and Up In The Air". The director of those two films was Jason Reitman. There is no indication in the Internet Movie Database that Chad Kultgen had any connection with either of those two well-received films. Is the book cover not then a form of fraud committed on potential purchasers of the book?
I note some reviewers found the book funny. What a very subjective and individual thing humour is. I think Terry Pratchett and P.J O'Rourke are funny. To me this book is about as funny as Proust or perhaps Ghormenghast. It is also 'funny' in one sense of the word that one of the very favourable "Editorial Reviews" for this book on Amazon is by "Stoya, star of Perfect Picture" a character about whom one of the parents in the book has an obsession.

I've said enough, this book doesn't really deserve any comment whatever but potential readers should I think receive fair warning.
3 people found this helpful
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Right on Target

I seriously enjoyed this book. I fell in love with Kultgen when i read The Average American Male, so when i was halfway through that book i immediately ordered this one. And just like before, halfway through this one i immediately put in for The Lie which is waiting patiently to be read.

Kultgen throws us into the middle of young teens and their families living in our current era. From the very first page i was drowning in details of people i didn't know but i knew they existed somewhere in my city let alone country. At first i wasn't ready for all the characters and keeping the kids straight with the parents but once i got to the 3rd chapter i had everything straight. I really like how he gave us perfect pictures of each teens personality and issues. As well as doing the same for their parents. I didn't know he was going to go into such detail about the parents because most authors just give a general persona to these kinds of characters and is more focused on the teens. But not Kultgen! He gave a deep insight to each character and how they interacted to the point of, at times i thought "TMI?? No but close enough." (lol)

My two favorite characters are the misfits so to speak...Tim Mooney and Brandy Beltmeyer. I know i was drawn to them because i could easily relate to both characters on all sides. I really did enjoy how he intertwined them with ease and honesty. To me they had more substance than the other somewhat shallow characters. The other females weren't my favorite but i think that was the point. The other male characters had an oddness to them that made me laugh and shake my head for most of the book. I can say i did enjoy the very end when Danny did what he did to Brooke and she finally shut up! (lol)

As rated i truly enjoyed this book and would not mind reading more about these characters. I doubt he would do it but it would be interesting to see what happens to these kids as they go into High School and their parents continue to be a bit messed up. Kultgen leaves us wanting more like a good author should do. His honesty, humor and reality based novel, "Men, Women and Children" is definitely something i will read again and secretly hope for a "part two" of sorts even if it never happens.

Thanx Kultgen for another amazing ride!
3 people found this helpful
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Disappointing, after his other works.

I'll start this by saying two things. I've read both of Kultgen's other books [[ASIN:0061231673 The Average American Male: A Novel]] and [[ASIN:0061657301 The Lie: A Novel]] and I finished those just about as quickly as I finished this one (within 24 hours). Kultgen is not an elaborate writer, falling more to colloquial writing and economy of words. But the words that he does try to use are pretty much chosen to exemplify how well Kultgen has grounded his stories in the immediate contemporary world. Kultgen wants you to know that he's hip, that he's edgy, that he knows what's going on with today's youth. Unlike your substitute teacher in high school who said the same thing, Kultgen actually means what he says. But being in touch with today's culture does not a good novel make all on it's own.

Kultgen's novels always seemed like he leaned on the idea that men today are always bombarded by sexual thoughts and having his characters be explicit about that is the best way he can go about writing his novel. This reliance on shock is prevalent throughout the novel, as it was with his other novels. I don't know if this one had a different feel to those moments, or if I've just grown up and realized that I don't want to be reading that sort of stuff in a book without a VERY good purpose for it.

The book itself focuses on about 4-5 different families with the parents and their middle school aged kids being the major focus. Each chapter wanders between different characters and what things they're dealing with. There's the one couple of parents who are both driven to cheat secretly on their spouse, but the sex they're getting on the side makes their relationship more bearable. There's the middle school student who is addicted to extreme pornography to the point where he can't get off unless he's watching transsexual porn, or latex featured female dominant porn. This creates a problem for the cheerleader that wants to lose her virginity, and figures the porn kid is her best shot. Etc, etc.

The whole book relies on this sort of pseudo-shock and I'm sure appeals to 20-somethings as "Oh, my life had moments like that..." and terrifies 40-something parents that worry that this is what is actually happening with middle school kids. Otherwise, Kultgen is too focused on getting brownie points for incorporating real world websites like "AshleyMadison" or "BangBus" or pulling in his nerd cred by having the World of Warcraft addicted character run his Night Elf Rogue through Dalaran while nerdy readers scream "It's like he knows us!!"

Overall, it wasn't a HARD book to read through, but I found myself wishing there'd been some greater character development or a noticeable amount of inner struggle or want for redemption in these characters. Kultgen accomplished this in [[ASIN:0061657301 The Lie: A Novel]], so I'd suggest you check that out first.

Oh. And it ends abruptly with little resolution.
2 people found this helpful
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Ehhh.

For me, Kultgen's novels have been a steady decline of enjoyment.

The Average American Male quickly became my favorite book... I'd be laughing out loud in the corner of my living room with no one around. I'd take it with me everywhere I went to read even just a page at a time.

The Lie was a very interesting book and I also had a hard time putting this book down for more than a day or two. It was a great story, although it was missing some of the excitement and graphic text.

Men, Women, & Children is pretty boring actually. I read it fast.. but the text never encouraged to keep reading. To be honest, I forced myself to push through it quickly so that I could move on to another book without feeling guilty for not reading this one all the way through first. Don't get me wrong, if you like Kultgen, you will enjoy parts of this book. Hell, YOU might even love it... but I didn't. Haha.

A very decent read, in my opinion.
2 people found this helpful
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"Interplay of the Literary and the Salacious"

What sets this imaginative novel apart, is its focus on the sexual fantasies and activities of generally "normal" and recognizable middle-class suburban types, including adults and pre-teens of both genders. I can see how some readers may view this book as pornography plain and simple, typified by recurring anal fixations. But the writing itself actually possesses some genuine literary qualities that confront us with a realistic and believable portrayal of family conflicts, adolescent psychology, marital difficulties and the huge impact of the internet on all of the above. Graphic language abounds and will discomfit those opposed to frank scenarios of this type.
2 people found this helpful