I wish I could give this book a "no star" because this author is speaking out of his own prejudice and ideology. He spends too much time "reading into" the intent of other books and exalting Essentialism, the philosophy that we do things because we see something essential in them or are trying to "capture" something from it.
For example, he claims Jesus' words, "This is my body, eat; this is my blood, drink", is proof that Jesus promoted cannibalism! And so does one of my favorite children's books, "Where The Wild Things Are": "Oh, please come back! We love you and will eat you up!". Wow, and all this time I thought that when my mom told me she was going to eat me up while planting kisses all over me, she was really preparing to literally devour me! Bloom apparently cannot determine figurative speech.
Normally, I'd have never chosen this book to read. But it was a required reading for my TENTH GRADE DAUGHTER, 16, for a literary arts class. Of course, it wasn't Bloom's fault that my daughter was forced to read his book; but I'm resentful that the critic reviews never mention the depth of perversions and sexual acts discussed. But then again, I assumed the teacher would have read any book she made required reading! Shame on me; in the future, it is my priority to read any of my daughters required reading.
The first time my daughter was profoundly disturbed was on page 27, when she read the story about the man who cut another man's penis off, cooked it in olive oil, and ate it, then stabbed the man to death, cut him up in small pieces and stored him in the freezer, eating 44 lbs of him before being arrested. Bloom then goes into the reasons for cannibalism: the Eaten is so loved and, by devouring the loved one, the Eater keeps the memory with him forever, to capture the Eaten's essence (strength, bravery, virility, etc) along with other reasons (starvation). But interestingly enough, he never mentions Kuru, the always incurable, irreversible and terminal (two weeks to 6 months) disease every cannibal gets from cannibalism, that causes holes in your brain, making it look like cerebral Swiss cheese.
A few pages later, Bloom offers up a two-paragraph discussion, including a recipe, on how to eat human placenta! Bloom swears it's an excellent source of protein, but I doubt that we presently have a dearth of protein sources in the world!
Anal sex, cunnilingus, fellatio, mutual masterbation and polyamory is also covered (my daughter had yet to hear of any of these). He also claims, "The obsession of virginity is one of the ugliest aspects of our sexual psyche." So much for the ADVANTAGES for abstaining from sex before marriage. The protection from accidental pregnancies, thus, abortions (which CAN later cause a future planned/wanted pregancy unable to come to full term, and actually a major cause of future infertility and miscarriages, with no predictor available to predict precisely which women are most susceptible); and a reduction of sexually transmitted diseases (also a cause of future infertility) are never mentioned. Never!
Since Bloom is a psychology teacher at Yale, I'm sure wrote it for college level. Had my daughter decided to read this book at 18, that would be her choice. But a college student, if offended, can usually drop the course, whereas a high school student with required reading is a captive audience.
It does make me wonder though - how much of Bloom's royalties for this book are from high school required reading assignments? Its not exactly a subject for an audience other than paleontology and psychology majors and those in medical school going into psychiatric medicine. It would be appropriate for these concentrations, but not a 16 year old girl.
Age appropriate-ness aside, it's not even the subject matters discussed that determined my one-star-rating; my rating was solely based upon Bloom's narrow scope of vision and bias that narrated this work. An attempt to explain the source of these deviances is valid; however, I had the strange feeling that (1) he was actually ADVOCATING some of these practices and thoughts we humans have developed, even attempting to normalize them, and, (2) he was taking quotes from other books literally, when they were only figures of speech - colloquialisms.
As far as Essentialism goes (and Bloom's interpretation of it), all of those Nazi war criminals at the Nuremberg trial should have been exonerated, because they were only acting within the scope of their own morality where what they believed was right! Hitler, Stalin, and Manson were innocent, as well! So was Son of Sam!
Unlike some, I'm not a parent who wants to censor or removed from schools every book that offends me. I'm against the censoring of ANY book, for any reason. (What other parents allow their kids to read is THEIR business.) I didn't like this book because it was too biased and omitted many medically scientific facts, not to mention some plain common sense.