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Rating:  Summary: Awesome, witty, and funny. Kept me laughing for days. Review: A close friend who I correspond with primarily via "e-mail" sent "E-Male" to me and said " You must read this!! We are Fe-Male!" As a confirmed literature snob (Give me Pynchon or give me death! . . . yes some could argue there is no difference) I would have tragically overlooked it. Instead . . . I read the book cover to cover - unable to separate myself from it until its conclusion. Rarely have I been so amused and touched by such fresh,honest,direct,unique yet eerily familiar voices. While I grew up in a completely different world from Anthony and Jeff -- I felt an instant connection. This book is a timeless anthem to the Generation "X" pilgrims. While the book is remarkably clever and hilarious at times -- the unwavering focus on the men's friendship and lives remains brilliantly subtle -- and these delicate layers of friendship, marriage,career and maturity must be properly appreciated or the essence of the book is utterly lost. What makes this book particularly precious is that some people just wont "get it"
Rating:  Summary: There's a plot! Review: E-Male was an entertaining book about the electronic correspondence of two friends. Having shared the same apartment in the past, two best friends now find themselves states apart. They correspond though witty and honest daily e-mails invoking humorous past incidents and funny narratives. Most of the e-mails are about their horrendous jobs or their acclamation to married life. Most of them are fun and provide a good glimpse into the lives of these two down to earth people. All of the e-mails end with what "rules" and what "sucks" on that particular day, which is often humorous. My only complaint would be the somewhat repetitive nature of their e-mails. All told, it is a fun read.
Rating:  Summary: Entertaining. Review: E-Male was an entertaining book about the electronic correspondence of two friends. Having shared the same apartment in the past, two best friends now find themselves states apart. They correspond though witty and honest daily e-mails invoking humorous past incidents and funny narratives. Most of the e-mails are about their horrendous jobs or their acclamation to married life. Most of them are fun and provide a good glimpse into the lives of these two down to earth people. All of the e-mails end with what "rules" and what "sucks" on that particular day, which is often humorous. My only complaint would be the somewhat repetitive nature of their e-mails. All told, it is a fun read.
Rating:  Summary: A true story of life, love and beer Review: I found this book to one of the most entertaining pieces I have ever read! Once I started, I could not put it down. The true-to-life stories being told as they unfold are warm and witty. "E-Male..." will make you laugh out loud with Jeff and Anthony as they traverse through life. A must read for women everywhere!
Rating:  Summary: What an idea! Review: I read a review in a magazine touting this book and decided to buy it (from Amazon.com, BTW). I enjoyed E-Male so much because it reminded me of the fun I've been having keeping touch through this new medium -- and the e-mails between these author-friends were frighteningly like the ones that fly across the ethos between me and my dear amiga. Makes me wish we'd kept all our e-mails so we could write Fe-Male. I smiled all the way through, then sent it on to my friend.
Rating:  Summary: There's a plot! Review: The concept of reading a book of email between two friends may seem dry, but there's actually a plot hidden in this: becoming a grown-up thirtysomething, with marriage, life, etc. impending, that sort of sneaks up on you in the end. I rather think that future anthropologists may read this a hundred years from now when they want to find out what it was like at the dawn of the email era, or at least twenty years from now we can re-read it to remember what the 90s were like. Cute, clever, occasionally profane and puerile, but that only adds to its charm.
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