February 9, 2010
I heard about this book through one of your readers on your website. I searched the four popular book search engines
(Abebooks, Biblio, Alibris, Amazon Marketplace) and found a copy in Australia for a good price. The last couple ofweeks I haven't seen a copy available anywhere and this is coming from a mass market paperback from the year 1983.
Here are the titles for a few of the chapters Henry:
1. The decision for prostitution
3. Understanding the age-old contract
4. Man the willing slave
5. Woman the emotionless mistress
6.The myth of female sensuality
7. A slave is born
8. Voluntary human bondage
9. Play dumb and win
and so on till chapter 23.
A paperback with 223 pages.
A paperback with 223 pages.
From the front of the book Henry:
The control and exploitation of men by women. A brutally honest expose, revealing how women can and do, catch, control and exploit a world of gullible, naive, male slaves
From the back of the book Henry:
"Man's basic cowardice has resulted in his turning for comfort and support to a creature who has no concern or depth of feeling for him as an individual. He has been encouraged in this from birth. Woman has sacrificed her potential, for a life of glorified prostitution, living at man's expense in return for empty flattery and carrot and stick style sexuality."
This book blew my mind away. It should be required reading for all willing males but sadly this
paperback is next to impossible to find. The book is a little outdated that since it was published
in Australia in 1983 allot more women have entered the workforce than back then due to economic reasons and the "plantation masters" have taught mostly western woman to postpone marriage, kids for a career and material wealth.
The interesting thing is that author Robert Spicer said that most women agreed with his conclusions in the book but it was "conditioned" men who didn't agree with Spicer's 'many' conclusions.
Henry Makow is the author of A Long Way to go for a Date. He received his Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of Toronto. He welcomes your feedback and ideas at

