This book was wildly uneven. Some chapters covered a quite interesting historical or cultural discussion of one aspect or another of facial hair. Chapters 1-5 were particularly well done - "The Antique Beard: A History of the Beard", "Beards of Fame and Infamy", "The Anti-Beard: A History of Shaving", "The Medical Beard", and "The Religious Beard". Others were quite irrelevant to the topic and even ridiculous. The chapter on "The Feminine Beard" includes a discussion of pornographic web sites. The chapter on "The Unconscious Beard" strays way out into bizarre territory, leaving me perplexed until I read the author bio on the back cover and realized that Peterkin is a psychiatrist. That chapter includes this tidbit: "You know the type of goatee which circles the mouth and makes it look like a vagina? My take is that men with unclear orientation, as well as a lot of gay men, favour this style as an unconscious badge of femininity and submissiveness. Some secretly harbor the wish to be dominated or facially raped." 'WTF?!?', as they say. The writing tends toward the dry and boring style characteristic of mediocre history writing, so unless you're a big fan of bearding culture (as I certainly am), there are probably more entertaining books to choose in place of this one.