Unhooked, Laura Sessions Stepp
Unhooked, Laura Sessions Stepp
List: $17.99 | Sale: $12.59
Club: $8.99

Unhooked
How Young Women Pursue Sex, Delay Love, and Lose at Both

Author: Laura Sessions Stepp

Narrator: Ellen Archer

Unabridged: 9 hr 9 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 03/15/2007


Synopsis

An eye-opening examination of the hookup culture, seen through the personal experiences of high-school- and college-age women who confront the hard lessons of dating, love, and sex.

We're living in an increasingly sexualized world, and it's the young—particularly young women—who must deal with the consequences. Kids are having more sexual contact than ever, and at an earlier age. They call it "hooking up." But what is "hooking up"? According to Laura Sessions Stepp, a reporter at the Washington Post, hooking up eludes a neat definition. It can be anything from an innocent kiss to sexual intercourse.

In Unhooked, Stepp follows three groups of young women (one in high school, one each at Duke and George Washington Universities). She sat with them in class, socialized with them, listened to them talk, and came away with some disturbing insights, including that hooking up carries with it no obligation on either side. Relationships and romance are seen as messy and time-consuming, and love is postponed—or worse, seen as impossible. Some young women can handle this, but many can't, and they're being battered—physically and emotionally—by the new dating landscape. The result is a generation of young people stymied by relationships and unsure where to turn for help.

"The need to be connected intimately to others is as central to our well-being as food and shelter," Stepp writes in Unhooked. "In my view, if we don't get it right, we're probably not going to get anything else in life right."


About Laura Sessions Stepp

Laura Sessions Stepp is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, currently at the Washington Post. She is a former visiting scholar at the National Academy of Sciences, and she chairs the board of directors of the Casey Journalism Center for Children and Families, based at the University of Maryland. Laura is the author of Our Last Best Shot: Guiding Our Children Through Early Adolescence.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Meredith on September 18, 2010

Our culture assures both young men and women that sex without attachment or boundaries is healthy. This author, through hundreds of interviews with tweens through college co-eds debunks this myth to prove that sex without responsibility is not only unhealthy, but will set these young people down the......more

Goodreads review by Katie on February 04, 2009

So far what I have learned from this book: rich, overachieving white people treat other people like objects, want to control everything, wonder why they are lonely and loveless. Film at 11. Now I have finished the book and the initial impression remains. The choices these girls are making are extreme......more

Goodreads review by Erin on September 26, 2007

I thought this book was absolutely terrific. I read some of the other reviews where readers complained the author advocated going back to the 1950s where girls acted like demure ladies...I didn't get that all. Obviously this is a small (and mostly white, upper class) segment of young women, but I tr......more

Goodreads review by Anne on November 06, 2007

I still don't know how I feel about this book. I didn't read it all the way through because she states her thesis on every page. The book is full of short synopses examining young women's lives in what Stepp calls "the unhooked culture," where one-night hookups take precedence over long-term relatio......more

Goodreads review by Heather on September 24, 2007

This book falls a bit under the "self help" read. Not a normal book that I would enjoy, however one that should be read by all who feel as though they can't seem to get things right regarding love. More emphasis on the college era but still applicable to anyone who's every felt used.......more