
There is really great news in here for women and not so great news. This isn't personal, and it's not like one team won and the other lost. And the book is dedicated the book to Jacob, "with apologies." Heck, they are even becoming more violent, or, at least, more comfortable expressing whatever suppressed tendencies toward violence they might have always held.

They increasingly earn more than $100,000 a year, regularly out-earning their husbands and, as men have done for generations, are starting to "marry down," if they marry at all. The full title is "The End of Men and the Rise Of Women," and in the book Rosin describes how women now earn the majority of college degrees and hold more than half the jobs in the American workplace. But while she tried to think of an alternative when it came time to turn the idea into a book, nothing else seemed to sum up this moment of transition nearly as well. She's explained to him that she didn't actually choose that title - it was coined by an editor at The Atlantic when Rosin wrote a cover story two years ago about how women are gaining on men in almost everything. "He sends me notes that say 'only bullies write books called "The End of Men,"'" Rosin says, ruefully.


Hanna Rosin wants you to know that her 9-year-old son, Jacob, questions the title of her book, too.
