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American Men

American Men

by Jordan Ritter Conn

Grand Central Publishing ·2026 ·336 pages
New Release
Near the Top
Near the Top
I Index
72/99
Top of the Pile

96/99

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Maybe Someday

47/99

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About This Book

A deeply intimate portrait of the lives of four men that examines—in profound and comprehensive ways—what it means to be a man in America. AMERICAN MEN is a journalistic account of the lives of four men from vastly different backgrounds and experiences, charting how each of them construct their relationship to masculinity, and how they navigate that relationship over time. The book searches the rarely-discussed crevices of men's lives, chronicling traumas they've suffered and ways they've recovered, the ways they've both inflicted and survived violence, their relationships to sex and their own bodies, how they've wielded power and struggled with powerlessness, while trying to build families, friendships, and fuller relationships to themselves. The book's protagonists include Ryan, an amateur MMA fighter who lives on a Mohawk reservation, struggling to come to terms with both his sexuality as a closeted gay man and his draw toward bar room violence; Gideon, an itinerant, tall and handsome West Point graduate and former baseball star who unravels when he encounters challenges to his status as the masculine ideal; Joseph, a Seattle law student whose marriage teeters on the brink as he tries on his own to contend with the effects of childhood sexual trauma; and Nate, an Ohio man still living at home and trying to establish security for himself in a rural pocket of a red state, where he's under threat as someone who is Black, trans, and poor. The book draws from five years of interviewing these men and following them though their daily lives, interweaving their stories into a mosaic that explores identity, heritage, and the pressures and performance of modern American masculinity.


Reviews

"Instead, he focuses, to great success, on compassionate storytelling."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Readable, empathetic and quietly profound."

Mark Oppenheimer· The New York Times Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Well written, full of narrative tension, and often deeply poignant ..."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"The result is four distinct stories that are written with equal grace and consideration."

Cat Acree· BookPage Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"While it may seem that shelves are oversaturated with the stories of American men, Conn's glimpse into the fragility of modern masculinity feels important."

Anthony Murisco· Library Journal Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

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