The Manual
A True Bad Boy Explains How Men Think, Date and Mate - and What Women Can Do to Come Out on Top
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- $15.99
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- $15.99
Publisher Description
The Manual is a revealing insider look at how bad boys think, date, and mate and is the perfect addition to relationship books like He's Just Not That Into You and It's Called a Break-Up Because It's Broken. It shows how readers can work the male approach to their advantage. Every guy has at least a little bit of bad boy in him, and The Manual will tell readers what they need to know to counter such tactics in every man.Steve Santagati brings years of experience to the table: as he says, it's like describing a bee sting versus getting one yourself - there's no comparison. Understanding Steve and his kind of bad boy makes understanding all other men so much easier. If you can figure bad boys out, you're a long way toward figuring them all out. Not only is the book practical, it's a hilarious read, told from the perspective of someone who's neither condescending nor callous but rather bold, honest, and street-smart. Steve Santagati wants to level the playing field, to give women control. Date him, dump him, marry him - now it's the reader's call, not his.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Santagati, a former model and admitted bad boy who has appeared on The Oprah Winfrey Show and The View, has expanded on his relationship advice enterprise, AskSteveSantagati.com, to make this guidebook to dating and taming the wild male. Dissecting all aspects of the bad boy lifestyle, including lessons like "How Bad Boys Bring Out the Best in Women" and "Porn Explained," Santagati takes women through every step of the bad boy's process, from hunt to sex to relationship to "endgame." Despite some tough love ("The Myth of the Nice Guy") and blatant boorishness ("How to Clothe Your Chest"), Santagati doesn't grate or insult, coming off as no more than an experienced, confident man who loves women. Indeed, he's the guy "who you won't even know is trying to pick you up until you're leaving his apartment the next morning," and he provides brief lessons in spotting and avoiding the players and misogynists among the populace. Often direct, but never above goofy humor or cheesy sentiment, Santagi may not "reveal everything that you need to know to successfully date and have relationships with men," but his short, easy-to-digest chapters make a perfect way to browse away an afternoon, gain some perspective and try narrowing the age-old gap between the sexes.