Sep. 21st, 2008
Non-Fiction
This is the first of the non-fiction books I'm allowing myself to review here. It's a very interesting relationship aid and takes a somewhat unconventional look at relationships. It addresses the fact that Women and Men are different on many levels, and because of those differences, inner priorities are hardwired differently. As such, the messages that we need to send have to be quite different from what we would like to send so that we can properly be understood.
Dr. Emerson Eggeric draws heavily from the position of Christianity (being a pastor, not surprising), but the advice it carries towards relationship building is invaluable to any couple: established or budding. Not something that can be read swiftly, it is better read in chunks and allowed to digest. Aside from the berating of those who do not walk the Christian line and the attached implication of any non-Christian marriage is doomed to fail anyway, it was well worth reading.
7/10
This is the first of the non-fiction books I'm allowing myself to review here. It's a very interesting relationship aid and takes a somewhat unconventional look at relationships. It addresses the fact that Women and Men are different on many levels, and because of those differences, inner priorities are hardwired differently. As such, the messages that we need to send have to be quite different from what we would like to send so that we can properly be understood.
Dr. Emerson Eggeric draws heavily from the position of Christianity (being a pastor, not surprising), but the advice it carries towards relationship building is invaluable to any couple: established or budding. Not something that can be read swiftly, it is better read in chunks and allowed to digest. Aside from the berating of those who do not walk the Christian line and the attached implication of any non-Christian marriage is doomed to fail anyway, it was well worth reading.
7/10