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Hardcover 50 Things Every Young Gentleman Should Know Book

ISBN: 1401602940

ISBN13: 9781401602949

50 Things Every Young Gentleman Should Know

(Part of the GentleManners Books Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Like New

$6.09
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Book Overview

In an ever-changing world, good manners never go out of style. These essential skills and tips will help you in several aspects as you grow into manhood.He knows how to shake hands. He knows how to be... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Required Reading!

This wonderful volume should be required reading for every young boy from the age of ten, and for every male to the age of 90. Quite simply, it explains how a gentleman responds in any number of situations-with good sense and consideration for others. If every male acted more gentlemanly, we could probably eliminate wars, terrorism, and general nastiness. Reading this book is certainly a sensible beginning.

Chief cook and bottle washer

This is a book that everyone should own to read and review at will, especially now in this time of forgotten manners and courtesy.

a must red for teen boys

It is like the old etiquette books but has all the basic info teen boys need for society and mine loved reading it and actually requested his own copy. Should be required reading for all!

Great Review, Great food for thought.........

Many of these jewels found withing these pages are long forgotten, or never heard of. Every young man should read this cover to cover, Easy reading, common sense brought to the forefront with a touch of class. If you exercised in social setting all the great things in this book, you'd command respect, anywhere, everytime!

A Really Good Place to Start

I have an eleven year-old son who thinks he's 13-going-on-21. Like most modern fathers, a nine-hour day - bracketed by a 40-minute commute - doesn't leave me with nearly as much time as I would love to spend with him. Add two younger brothers to the mix and "one-on-one" time becomes truly precious. I honestly believe that being a gentleman gains a man a lot of respect - even if the people he encounters really don't know why they respect him. Like all fathers, I want my sons to be liked & respected. 50 Things Every Young Gentleman Should Know covers the basics in a no-nonsense manner. Each situtation is breifly described and defined. It is then followed by "What you do," "What you DON'T do" and "Why." It is a very easy read (I read it from cover to cover in under 45 minutes.) that communicates it's ideas in a very clear manner. Does it cover EVERY situation that a young man is going to encounter? No, but it does a good job of covering the most common ones. Everything from "What to do with a napkin," to "How to treat someone with a disability." These are all things that my four brothers and I were taught at home, but we had the absolute luxury (By today's standards.) of Dad being at home on the family farm when he wasn't commercial fishing or working for the county road department. Being the youngest, I got lots of "peer reenforcement" from my older brothers. My son's reaction? "You're joking, right, Dad?" I looked him squarely in the eye and informed him that I was most certainly not joking and that I expect him to not only read the book, but to learn the things it has to teach -- and to put them to work in his life. He shook his head and walked off to his bedroom with the book. He was back in five minutes, promising to read five "Things" each day. I think he must have read the dedication I enscribed on the inside of the front cover. Most of it is highly personal and (I pray) not applicable to your individual situtation, but here is the last paragraph: "Why is your learning to be a gentleman so important to me? Because I love you and I want you to be liked and respected by everyone you meet. Love, Dad." Like I said in my review's title: This is not the last word on training up your sons to be gentlemen, but it is a good first step on that all-important journey. 50 Things Every Young Gentleman Should Know
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