Carrie N. (clnelson) reviewed The Baby Boon : How Family-Friendly America Cheats the Childless on + 45 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This book makes an interesting argument that making women's rights and family rights synonymous reinforces proscribed gender roles and holds back, rather than advances, the women's movement and many other civil rights issues in our country. The author's style, unfortunately, veers from academic into whiny in many places and takes away from her worthwhile ideas.
Brenna B. (demiducky25) reviewed The Baby Boon : How Family-Friendly America Cheats the Childless on + 161 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This was a difficult book for me to rate because I had times where I liked it and other times where I couldn't stand reading it! Elinor Burkett makes many wonderful points in this book that I had never considered before, specifically if we are offering so many benefits, tax breaks, and flex-time to people with children, isn't it then discrimination to not offer something similar to people without children. She notes that she feels that of course we should help families in need, but her real gripe is with middle to upper class families who don't really need financial help taking that help away from families living in poverty. Each chapter in the book had a different feel to it, some I found fascinating, but many I found VERY repetitive. What I really wanted to see was some sort of suggestions offered to help rectify this inequality, but that was made on a very limited basis and really only at the end of the book.