This book is vital reading for anyone interested in gender studies or feminism in general. As always, we must be clear what type of feminism we are discussing. Most sensible readers are in favor of equal rights for men and women, there's little debate about that.
What we're discussing here is feminism as lesbianism by another name, as most leading modern feminists have declared. To give but one example from one of feminism's leading lights:
"Lesbianism is the key to liberation and only women who cut their ties to male privilege can be trusted." -- Charlotte Bunch
The author demonstrates through a complete reading of leading feminists that modern feminism is a movement that seeks to destroy heterosexuality, end traditional marriage, and reclassify ALL heterosexual sex as violence against women.
The book makes many fascinating points, however at the risk of making this review too lengthy, I'll just note that the author overwhelming proves that feminism, in its modern form, equals lesbianism. No ifs ands or buts. As it would turn out, calling a feminist a "heterosexual" is one of the ugliest insults you can cast -- as some researchers trying (and failing) to make a list of prominent heterosexual feminists discovered. Perhaps most interesting is the critique of Friedan and other earlier less radical feminists who feared that feminism would be taken over by radical lesbians. This obviously has come to pass.
Finally, the author shows just how many of feminism's leading figures were totally utterly psychotic. Kate Millett for example. Kate's own sister described her as "a brutal sadist, a violent bully" who drove her lesbian lover to suicide and traumatized her family to the point of ruin. A great role model for all of us. We must do what we can to combat the mental illness these damaged women are trying to spread to society.
This book is an ugly nasty read as it explores the dark and deranged crevices of a truly hideous political philosophy. Alas, we must get ourselves dirty sometimes to understand the pathological ideologies that threaten our culture and society. This book is one of those such unpleasant but necessary things we must grapple with.