I have been very impressed with Dr. Hakeem in interviews, but I must admit his book seriously suffers from being self-published.
I expected, or at least hoped for, a book centering around the unique insight Dr. Hakeem brings as a psychiatrist who ran group therapy for all varieties of “trans” identifying people. I was hoping for case studies of patients he saw, privacy law permitting, with examples of each type of “trans,” as he categorizes them.
Unfortunately, the book that went to print is a poorly edited jumble of what could be diary entries or blog posts. As a piece of the written word, it’s a disaster, with frequent typos, run-on sentences, misspellings, and incomplete statements. At least one passage is printed twice, word for word, across three pages. Pronoun usage, arguably a very important piece of the “trans” discussion, is inconsistent.
In the first third of the book, Dr. Hakeem rarely delves deeply into any topic, hopping from quick outlines of his “trans” categories to an brief chapter mostly quoting 1984 to a slightly braggadocious bit about what it means to be gender critical.
The middle features pieces written by victims of gender ideology. Some are better composed than others, and while I lay no blame at the feet of the traumatized writers, a few are so fragmented they would have been better suited to a more artistic book dedicated to the various mental states of victims.
The final third of the book includes more chapters from contributors touching on various organizations involved in the battle against gender ideology. It’s worth emphasizing that half or more of this book is not actually written by Dr. Hakeem.
All in all, if you’re looking to educate yourself about the “trans” phenomenon and can only read a few books on it, I would not recommend this one. It’s poorly structured, poorly edited, and the information in it can be better gleaned from the personal works of victims and the gender critical, and Dr. Hakeem’s interviews.