This book gets a pretty sweet shout-out in the new season of 'Orange is the New Black,' which I enjoyed immensely (the new season and the Hanna Rosin shout-out). Not surprisingly, Mr. Healy's summary is woefully and hilariously inaccurate, but the joke does point out that the book has a very unnecessarily inflammatory headline, and in this day and age, it comes across as the book equivalent of click bait.
I urge you to look past the incredibly awful title and try to enjoy and appreciate Rosin's well-researched presentation of contemporary gender dynamics and her very insightful analysis. Each chapter includes both the kind of anecdotal/narrative evidence you should grow to expect from a talented journalist over at The Atlantic, as well as a clear and occasionally dry presentation of statistical data. The book is largely concerned with the disproportionate number of women obtaining college degrees and gainful employment, and I think it would be particularly interesting when read in tandem with Jimmy Carter's new book on women's issues A Call to Action. Rosin presents the reader with all the manifold ways in which women are higher achieving than their male counterparts, while Carter focuses on all the ways women continue to be oppressed, including the educated and employed first-world women Rosin is concerned with.