Work + Money

Monday, October 6, 2008

Dee Dee Myers's new book: 'Why Women Should Rule the World'

by Jo Keroes.


In no particular order, here’s some of the stuff I’ve done over the last 48 or so hours when I should have been writing this review of Dee Dee Myers’s new book:

  • Sifted through and cleared out ten years worth of old files that had been happily sitting in their drawers, not bothering anybody for all that time;

  • Baked a cake (a good one; you’re welcome to the recipe, but I was clearly stalling);

  • Googled for over 90 minutes to find the lyrics and then watched the YouTube video of Jack Johnson’s singing Ben Harper’s “With My Own Two Hands,” a charming song you should sing to your kids, that turned out to have been part of the Curious George soundtrack.

  • Read the entire Sunday NY Times (OK, not the sports section, but still, almost every word of all the rest of it);

  • After going out for Chinese food, watched several reruns of Law and Order and two installments of a cool Canadian police procedural set in Vancouver that no one else seems to have heard of;

  • Zigzagged between Meet the Press and This Week with George Stephanopoulos – Stephanopoulos had two women on the panel of commentators. Tom Brokaw interviewed three guy governors;

  • Transferred leftovers and other stored food from plastic to glass containers. (I’ve become unreasonably neurotic about the potential poisonous properties of clear plastic);

  • Read a hundred pages of Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s harrowing and important memoir, Infidel, which I’m not reviewing for Mommy Track’d or anyplace else, but which you should definitely read;


Clearly, there was some serious procrastination going on and I think I’ve figured out why. Myers has written a book titled Why Women Should Rule the World. I ask you: do we need still another book trumpeting that the world would be a better place if women had a greater hand in running it? Don’t we know this? Isn’t it preaching to the choir? And don’t we already have a bigger part in running the world? Haven’t we put those millions of cracks in the glass ceiling and shouldn’t we just go on doing it, splinter by splinter? In short, haven’t we heard all this before? Dee Dee Myers doesn’t think so. Nor does she think we’ve come far enough.

At thirty one the first woman to serve as White House Press Secretary and the public face of the Clinton administration, Myers learned first hand the difference between having responsibility and wielding real authority. Her experiences being overlooked at crucial moments and denied information she needed to confront the press inform her argument that despite the enormous progress women have made, they still hold the minority of leadership positions in most of the fields that “count.” Women make the majority of consumer decisions in this country, yet we still account for only 2% of all CEOs. Women make up half the country’s law school graduates, yet still only 15% of the partners in law firms or judges on the federal bench are women; only 10% of law school deans or general counsels at Fortune 500 companies are women. Women make up nearly half of medical school graduates, yet still only 10% of medical school deans are women. The statistics for women in engineering are even worse. Read More.


Jo Keroes received her PhD from Stanford University and was a Professor of English at San Francisco State University for more than 25 years. She writes the Mommy Track'd book review column Books: Viewed & Reviewed and is the author of Tales Out of School, Images of Teachers in Film and Fiction.

Syndication:

From the Community…

Comments 1-3 of 3
  • JosieM111's Avatar
    Posted by JosieM111 Tue Jul 8, 2008 9:19pm PDT

    I think I would have procrastated reading the book, nevermind writing a review. I agree with your comment, just by mere title, it seems the material within has been re-gifted.

    Thank you for a honest review.

    J.

    www.lifeofjosiem.com

    Report Abuse
  • Christa's Avatar
    Posted by Christa Mon Jul 28, 2008 5:45pm PDT

    DaVinci's Inquest rocks. I am regularly up waaaaay too late on Sunday nights to watch it.

    Report Abuse
  • Timothy  Mendonez's Avatar
    Posted by Timothy Mendonez Fri Aug 1, 2008 9:54am PDT

    The question is not why women should rule the world; the question is, can women rule the world. After about 6,000 years of human civilization, no culture has had women running collectively as the leading gender (let's not mention female monarchs who ruled because of their bloodline). If they have the same physical strength and creativity, you'd think that they should have by now.

    Dee Dee, if your book is meant to be fantasy book in the "The planet of the Apes" persuasion make some more sequels.

    Report Abuse
Comments 1-3 of 3

leave your comment

You must sign in to post a comment

Sign In for personalized information

New User? Sign Up

work+money byte

"When you're embarking on a job search, talk to everyone who comes across your path, through recommendations from colleagues and friends -- even if there is no job right now or it's to talk about a job or company you don't think you're interested in. You never know what will come out of that conversation...