I'm with Stupid: One Man. One Woman. Ten thousand Years of Misunderstanding Between the Sexes Cleared Right Up by Gene Weingarten, Gina Barreca

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  • Pub. Date: January 2004
  • 256pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 2004
    • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
    • Format: Hardcover, 256pp

    Synopsis

    Is God male or female? Why do women, but not men, flush public toilets with their feet? Why are men, but not women, obsessed with parallel parking? Why do women, but not men, leave eleven-minute messages on answering machines? Why do men feel guilty about nothing, and women feel guilty about everything? Was Marilyn Monroe...fat?

    These philosophical quandaries, and more, are finally debated in I'm with Stupid, an uproariously funny dialogue between Gene Weingarten, the gleefully misogynistic Washington Post humor columnist, and Gina Barreca, the gleefully feminist University of Connecticut professor.

    The first significant book about men and women actually written by a man and a woman, I'm with Stupid is privy to the dark secrets of both sexes. It's not a lecture, but an extended argument, a combustion of viewpoints that winds up unearthing startling truths. In the words of Gene and Gina: "Our Mars and Venus breach their orbits and collide in a screaming fireball from Hell."

    The subject matter spans art and expression, science and technology, politics and history, spirituality and religion, sex and sexuality, as well as the complex etiology, sociology, and etymology of dirty jokes. Men: Learn at last how to know for sure when you are having a fight. Women: Learn what he really means when he says "I'm sorry." Take sides as Gene and Gina face off in a haggling challenge in which the winner manages to get the lowest price for a Mercedes S500. Or just take in the show.

    I'm with Stupid is the book that finally establishes, conclusively, that women are funnier than men. And vice versa.

    Publishers Weekly

    When Washington Post humor columnist Weingarten (The Hypochondriac's Guide to Life. And Death) paired up with Barreca (They Used To Call Me Snow White, But I Drifted), a professor of feminism and women's humor at the Univ. of Conn., to "plumb important sociological verities," the ensuing result is this fairly predictable but entertaining he-said, she-said, literary battle of the sexes. Marked by a lively, irreverent tone and presented as an extended transcribed conversation between the two writers, the book explores topics ranging from infidelity and finances to bathroom differences and body image, in a friendly teasing style. While the underlying premise-men and women are alarmingly different-wears somewhat thin and feels gimmicky by the end, the book makes up for it with comedic highlights such as a gender test to see where one falls on the Betty Boop-Jesse Ventura continuum. Also fun are the authors' poems, lists of favorite vacation destinations with reasons and signs that sex has become too important in your relationship. (Feb.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

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    Biography

    Gene Weingarten, pictured here with Murphy, his Plott Hound, is a nationally syndicated humor columnist and a Pulitzer Prize-winning staff writer for The Washington Post. He has written two books: The Hypochondriac's Guide to Life. And Death. and I'm with Stupid (with Gina Barreca). Weingarten lives in Washington, D.C. He has instructed his family that he wishes to be buried in Washington's Congressional Cemetery, because it allows dogs to run free. He wants his tombstone to include only his birth and death dates, and this: "A funny man who loved dogs." The stone will be carved in the shape of a fire hydrant.


    Gina Barreca is a professor of feminism and English literature at the University of Connecticut and a columnist for The Hartford Courant. She is the author of They Used to Call Me Snow White, But I Drifted, and four other books.

    The authors have never met.

    Customer Reviews

    I'm with Stupid: One Man. One Woman. Ten thousand Years of Misunderstanding Between the Sexes Cleareby Anonymous

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    July 06, 2004: I enjoy reading a lot but usually find that if I read a funny book, there's not much intellect in it. On the other hand if I read an intellectual book, there's not much humor in it. This book successfully and effectively has both. I could not put this book down. I certainly learned many things about men that I did not know (bathroom habits come to mind). But I also learned much about what men didn't know about women that I assumed that they did. I have to say that one of my many favorite parts of this book was when Gina and Gene attempted to write a mini novel. I laughed hysterically, out loud, at the ending of their second collaboration. Oh-----My-----Goodness!!! What is so great about reading this work is that it does not ask you to 'choose a side', but gives you an insight to both sides which suggests that in the end aren't we really together in life's venture. A team that brings to the game all of the elements needed to win. I applaud Gina & Gene for stepping up to the plate. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is either male or female. Although I did share some of the humor with my 13 year old son, I would definitely not want him to read it in it's entirety because, in my opinion, parts of it would be totally inappropriate for adolescent and younger ears.

    I'm with Stupid: One Man. One Woman. Ten thousand Years of Misunderstanding Between the Sexes Cleareby Anonymous

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    February 22, 2004: Double the wit for your money! It's the arguments and conversations we've all been having, but with the lines and comebacks we wished we had thought of. Gene and Gina tap into the human experience and social questions of our post modern society... wait a minute... they do do that, but THE POINT OF THE BOOK IS THAT IT'S FUNNY! Everybody has had these conversations with the opposite sex -- just not with as much eloquence, style and wit. Good ammunition for the spousal debates.


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