cover image Raising Boys Without Men

Raising Boys Without Men

Peggy F. Drexler, Linden Gross. Rodale Press, $23.95 (240pp) ISBN 978-1-57954-881-0

Single or gay mothers-whom Drexler dubs ""maverick moms""-are ""real"" parents, in case anyone needed reminding. The families they create are ""as real and as legitimate as any other."" The author, an assistant professor of psychology in psychiatry at Weill Medical College of Cornell University, bases her book on an extensive research study she conducted. Though she's curiously cagey on numbers, she does reveal that she interviewed a variety of lesbian mothers, single mothers, sons of single moms and sons of two-mother families. The results of her survey serve as a refreshing antidote to critics who insist that family life today is on the verge of being atomized. In an upbeat but never preachy tone, Drexler retells anecdote after anecdote illustrating her point (namely, that female-headed households may be better for boys than households with men). The book is mostly narrative in structure, with bulleted points at the end of each chapter explaining what ""maverick moms"" do that makes them successful parents (they encourage their sons to participate in a wide variety of activities; they actively recruit male figures from their families and the community to be in their sons' lives; they model the behavior they want their sons to emulate, and set examples of strength and compassion; etc.). This important work will serve as a beacon to the country's nearly 10 million single mothers.