The Average American Marriage
A Novel
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- $6.99
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- $6.99
Publisher Description
The Average American Marriage, the long-awaited sequel to Chad Kultgen’s much debated, always controversial The Average American Male, is a matter-of-fact foray into the male mind and sexual fantasy.
Now married with children, Kultgen's lewd and sex-obsessed narrator once again offers up his deep (and not so deep) thoughts on love, marriage, kids, and (naturally) sex: from birthday sex to interns to parenting, The Average American Male looks upon the institution of marriage with the same deadpan smirk he has brought to the rest of his sex-addled, perennially disaffected life.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In Kultgen's sequel to The Average American Male, his unnamed narrator is now unhappily married to Alyna and they have two kids, Andy and Jane. Bored in his sexless marriage, the narrator spends his days watching babysitter porn and fantasizing about his officemates. Enter college student Holly McDonnel, 21, the "hottest chick in the place." Predictably, an affair follows. There are keg parties, pot smoking, and a trip to a gay wedding. The narrator runs into trouble when Alyna finds dirty pictures of Holly on his cell phone and kicks him out of the house. There are hardly any surprises here: STD scares, couples counseling, and an eventual reconciliation with Alyna. Derivative, dull, and misogynistic, this is not a satire of modern life; it is a sad book written by a cynical man. The lame attempt at social commentary regarding Facebook, phones, and the younger generation's neediness feels like an old man shaking his fist at the sky. If you want middle-aged men behaving badly or dealing with suburban blahs, read Lolita or White Noise instead.
Customer Reviews
Good none the less
It was a good book. Like all the others you laugh the entire time but it was a nit more depressing than most.
The Average American Marriage Review
I probably wouldn’t have read this book however my friend recommended it to me after she read it. It honestly makes me scared to have children and to get married because I don’t want to go through what the characters did. It’s completely frightening. Great book though
So bad, it's useful
It's like a bad, dated, stand up comedy routine in novel form. It's also repetitive, repetitive, repetitive, repetitive, repetitive....... It is a good guide on how not to write, so it's got that going for it. I recommend it. One Star.