Notes on Being a Man

Scott Galloway
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Notes on Being a Man

Scott Galloway
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Overview

304 PAGESENGLISH

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Overall rating: 5.0 / 5 from 3 reviews.

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Review topics: ["advice","book","read"].

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Reviews

Excellent read

"I just read this book at 47 and I wish I'd been able to read it at 17. I have two daughters but bought a copy for my stepson who is about to turn 18. Excellent life advice every man (and future man) needs to read and consider."

Anonymous (5/5)

Worth the Read - GREAT GIFT for ANYONE

"Excellent read, timely advise, while author shares his own experiences growiingup"

Glenn (5/5)

Notes for Being a Man by Scott Galloway

"Scott Galloway’s Notes for Being a Man reads less like a manifesto and more like a set of hard-earned marginalia written by someone who has lived loudly, failed publicly, and reflected honestly. The book is a collection of short, direct essays that tackle masculinity not as an abstract ideal, but as a series of daily choices shaped by work, relationships, money, status, and responsibility. What distinguishes Galloway’s voice is its blend of bluntness and vulnerability. He is unsentimental about the realities facing men—economic displacement, loneliness, the erosion of traditional pathways to meaning—yet he resists the easy slide into grievance. Instead of blaming culture or offering nostalgia as a cure, he emphasizes agency. Again and again, the book returns to a central thesis: dignity is built, not granted. Purpose comes from service, discipline, and showing up when it’s inconvenient. The structure mirrors this philosophy. The entries are concise, sometimes aphoristic, often provocative. Some feel like a stern mentor’s advice; others read as confessions. Galloway is at his best when he writes about love, fatherhood, and friendship, where his tough exterior softens into something reflective and humane. His insistence that success without connection is a hollow victory lands with particular force in a world obsessed with optimization and personal branding. That said, the book is not without limitations. Galloway’s worldview is shaped by privilege and a distinctly capitalist framework, and at times his prescriptions—work harder, endure more, accept pain—can feel insufficiently attentive to structural barriers or mental health nuance. Readers looking for a gentler, more therapeutic take on masculinity may find his tone abrasive. Yet even when one disagrees with him, the arguments are clear enough to engage rather than dismiss. Ultimately, Notes for Being a Man succeeds because it treats masculinity as something earned through conduct rather than asserted through identity. It doesn’t promise happiness or certainty; it promises meaning through responsibility. Whether you take its advice wholesale or argue with it line by line, the book provokes reflection—and that, in an era of shallow self-help, is its quiet strength."

Peter (5/5)

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  • Published date: Nov 04, 2025
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 304
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster
  • ISBN: 9781668084359
  • Dimensions: 6.0" W x 1.2" L x 9.0" H
Scott Galloway is a professor of marketing at NYU’s Stern School of Business and a serial entrepreneur. He was named one of the world’s best business professors by Poets&Quants. Scott has founded nine companies, including Prophet, RedEnvelope, L2, and Section, where he also teaches. He is the New York Times bestselling author of The FourThe Algebra of HappinessPost CoronaAdrift, and The Algebra of Wealth. Scott has served on the boards of directors of the New York Times Company, Urban Outfitters, Berkeley’s Haas School of Business, Panera Bread, and Ledger. He has won multiple Webby and best podcast awards, and his books have been translated into twenty-eight languages. Across his Prof G PodProf G Markets, and Pivot podcasts, his No Mercy/No Malice newsletter, and his YouTube channel, Scott reaches millions.

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