Why Men Don’t Listen And Women Can’t Read Maps by Allan Pease, Barbara Pease

After reading a very interesting book called Why Men Don’t Listen And Women Can’t Read Maps, I have realized that men and women are physiologically different, and therefore you can make certain generalisations about them. What I liked about that book is that it recognises our similarities, even as it acknowledges that we are not identical. It doesn’t make a case for inequality. [source]

Have you ever wished your partner came with an instruction booklet? This international bestseller is the answer to all the things you've ever wondered about the opposite sex. For their controversial new book on the differences between the way men and women think and communicate, Barbara and Allan Pease spent three years traveling around the world, collecting the dramatic findings of new research on the brain, investigating evolutionary biology, analyzing psychologists, studying social changes, and annoying the locals. The result is a sometimes shocking, always illuminating, and frequently hilarious look at where the battle line is drawn between the sexes, why it was drawn, and how to cross it. Read this book and understand--at last!--why men never listen, why women can't read maps, and why learning each other's secrets means you'll never have to say sorry again.