Reviews of Freedom Twenty-Five: A 21st-Century Man’s Guide To Life

This page will act as a permanent collection of every review that Freedom Twenty-Five: A 21st Century Man’s Guide To Life ever receives. If you have written a review and I haven’t linked to it here within a few days, please harass me via email (freedomfrost25 at gmail dot com) or in the comments below.

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Ferdinand Bardamu

“More importantly, Frost’s book is invaluable not just because of his practical advice but because of the attitude it presents. Notwithstanding his occasional forays into condescension, Frost reinforces an important idea that most self-improvement shysters don’t – self-improvement is a roadmap, not a guided tour. There is no 100 percent foolproof method to becoming rich, getting a six-pack or having women line up to suck your dick. You need to seek out the facts yourself, test them, find out what works for you and what doesn’t. Everyone is different enough that they’ll need to chart their own paths to prosperity.

“Living well is the best revenge” is a tired cliche, but it’s the truth. The manosphere takes heat from all corners – from feminists upset that the PC apple cart is being overturned to Christian “conservatives” eternally seeking out marks for their never-ending con game. The thin red thread connecting these disparate groups of haters is that they are all failures in their personal lives. Oh sure, some of them may be outwardly successful, healthy, wealthy or otherwise. But deep down inside, all of them feel inadequate, even if they won’t admit it. Whether it’s the barren-wombed lawyer termagent who labors eighty hours a week with nothing to look forward to but another drunken one-night stand, or the married eunuch putting himself into an early grave to provide for a wife who hates him and children who don’t respect him, mediocrities can’t stand excellence. Like crabs in a bucket, they’d rather drag down anyone who rises to the top instead of figuring out how to escape themselves.

What gives me satisfaction when these types hate on me and my comrades is not only knowing that I’m healthier, more financially secure and sexually satisfied then them, but knowing that I have one thing they don’t and never will – freedom. While I’m still working on achieving my dreams, unlike the termagent or the eunuch, I don’t have to wait until arthritis sets in to realize them. I’m not tied to my job, my house or my city. I don’t get out of bed every morning dreading the day to come. I don’t work a job I hate to pay off a stream of credit card debts. I don’t put up with disrespectful women out of some misbegotten sense of loyalty to a society that abandoned me long ago. While I’d never say I’m happy (because “happiness” is a fleeting emotion, not a state of being), I can look at myself in the mirror and claim to be fulfilled – something none of my detractors can honestly say.”

Aaron Sleazy

“Frost challenges us to cut the bullshit from our lives, escape our mundane existence, and find ourselves. He himself hasn’t found all answers to the questions that were pressing him either, but he is able to share a tremendous amount of insight in this short book. The review is long and detailed, but if you trust my judgment without reading it, or you simply belong to the “tl; dr generation”, I’ll tell you straight away that I highly recommend this book. It may well be the best investment you have made all year long.

Pete’s Game Thoughts

“Firstly, I really liked it. This is something I wish I had when I first started out in the game. It is a cold hard slap in the face to the un-initiated. A call for men to take control of their lives in matters of health, finances, women and purpose. A roadmap to finding what you really want in life. The beginning is poetic, descriptive and powerful. Frost gives insight into why certain investments are valuable and why getting married young is a bad idea. His personal story is encouraging and provoking.

Johnny Milfquest

“Freedom Twenty-Five: A 21st Century Man’s Guide To Life is the most truthful and controversial self-help book that I have ever read.

It is full of specific, sound and practical advice but doesn’t micro-manage every detail of your life.

If you want to know how to eat, how to exercise, where to live, how to educate yourself, which career to choose, how to start a business, how to invest money and what you should expect from your relationships with women then look no further.

I really can’t argue much with what he has written.

I might not rate ETFs as highly as Frost does. I might want more guidance on knowing the difference between grass-fed and non-grass fed beef. But other than that, I got nothing.

He covers all the bases. He pulls no punches. He gives it to you straight and he has his head screwed on better at the age of 26 than I do at 38.

I was particularly impressed with his advice on education, careers and entreprenuership.

This isn’t just a young man’s guide. As a impoverished old fart who has suffered from many bad personal choices over the years, I still derived alot of value from this book.

Readers, I strongly suggest that you buy this book and chart a new course after you have read it.”

Foseti

“It may be oversimplifying a bit to say that the broader alt-right-o-sphere can also be divided into these categories and that Frost’s book may be the best (and perhaps only one-stop) brief introduction to all five of these topics.

Delusion Damage

“Frost is a good guy, he even sent me a review copy of his new book which launches today, and since I’m apparently not a good enough guy to have taken the time to write a proper long review, I’ll just link to the book here and say that it’s not bad – of course, it’s his first try at a book and not his 999th, but even so, I learned something – which is more than I can say for a lot of other books.

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{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Keoni Galt January 22, 2012 at 4:39 pm

OK Frost, finally got around to it.

Sorry it took so long.

http://hawaiianlibertarian.blogspot.com/2012/01/finding-your-freedom.html

Reply

alex February 24, 2012 at 2:19 am

any plans for an audio book version

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