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***Updated with Giveaway Winner***
Congrats to Amber @ Classic Housewife, she was the randomly generated winner.
Looking for answers on how to raise boys?
Ever wonder…
- Why can’t he sit still?
- Is he hearing a word I say?
- Why is he angry all the time?
Boys are born to be wild. Their strong spirit, endless imagination, and hunger for adventure are only matched by their deep desire to be affirmed, esteemed, and loved. In their new book Wild Things, therapists Stephen James and David Thomas help parents and educators understand what exactly makes boys tick.
Interview with the Authors
by Stephen James and David Thomas
The subject of Wild Things was inspired by Maurice Sendak’s classic tale Where the Wild Things Are. Why did you find this theme so appropriate?
If you read closely Sendak’s story, he brilliantly speaks to a boy’s hunger for risk and adventure, how boys crave power and purpose, and how they make sense of the world around them. Sendak’s portrait of boys felt so accurate to the two of us and a unique way of exploring and dissecting a boy’s inner world.
In Wild Things, we borrow from the passion and ethos of Sendak’s book and use that to provide insight and direction for parents, teachers, and mentors in what it means to love a boy well. We also try and give a lot of real life examples from our own lives and from the families we work with in our counseling practices.
What mistakes have parents and educators made in their approach to rearing and training boys?
For me (Stephen) the consistent mistake my wife and I make is that we over explain and over verbalize with our sons. This is a problem that is very common. In parenting boys, adults tend to talk to them and at them a great deal. We talk and talk and talk and end up sounding a lot like Charlie Brown’s teacher. “Whah, whah, whah.” In Wild Things we offer a number of different strategies for engaging and educating boys that better match their unique design. Boys learn through experience and physical repetition. They need consistent firm boundaries and loads of encouragement.
As far as school goes we speak a lot in the book that the compulsory model we use for schooling in the United States is generally well-suited to a girl’s learning style. It’s heavy on verbal and written expression, two particular areas of strength for most girls. It involves a good deal of sitting still for extended periods of time with mostly auditory instruction. These methods don’t match a boy’s way of learning or draw on his learning strengths.
How did you come to the conclusions you discuss in Wild Things?
The book is a combination of science and research, clinical experience (our own as therapists and that of others), and our own journey of parenting five boys between the two of us.
As therapists, we have sat with thousands of men and boys over the years. Our hope was to bring their voices into the content of Wild Things. We have learned so much from the males we’ve had the great honor of working with and hoped to bring their stories into this text. In addition to those, we are still learning so much from living with five of our wild things.
Who are the most important role models in a boy’s life?
There is no question that a boy’s parents play a foundational role in the man he becomes. In Wild Things we have a chapter that specifically address a mother’s relationship with her son as well as a chapter that addresses a father’s relationship with his son. But it doesn’t stop there for boys. There is great truth to the old African proverb that says “it takes a village.” We talk early in the book about how a boy begins to hunger for other voices and a part of our role is to put them in his way, so that he ends up with this community of individuals who believe in him and hold him up.
People often talk about the father’s role in teaching a boy to be a man, but a mother’s relationship is important too. What are some mistakes a mother can make?
A mother’s role is so very important. That message is woven throughout Wild Things. There is so much to the answer to this question. You’ll need to read the book to get a comprehensive look at your role throughout his development. We talk a lot with mom’s about two unique callings within their role, both of which lend themselves to mistakes and potential harm to the mother-son relationship. To boil it down though to a couple of things we would say 1) The first is being safe and 2) the second is letting go. We break both of those down in great detail within the book. By being safe we mean a mothers ability to let her son be a boy. By letting go we mean a mother’s willingness to let her boy become a man. We speak a whole lot more to this throughout the book. It’s such a big question, and an important question for moms to consider.
If you could give once piece of advice to parents and educators reading this book, what would it be?
The study of a boy is such a worthwhile use of your time and resources. Boys are complex, imaginative, mysterious, brilliant, challenging, creative, strong, tender, courageous beings—and each is unique. Parenting and educating them is a wonderful, difficult, complex, enjoyable, physical, emotional, delightful, maddening journey. Our hope is that Wild Things is a useful guide along that journey.
If we have to give one piece of advice it would be for parents and educators to continue to invest in their own emotional and spiritual maturity. Growing yourself is the best gift you can give a boy you love.
Based on clinical research, Stephen James and David Thomas have filled Wild Things with practical tips and suggestions for parents. They guide readers through the five stages of a boy’s development, providing an overview and explanation of each stage, followed by a plan to put new principles into action.
One reader will receive a free copy of this valuable new book. Leave us a comment with a funny story about your “Wild Thing” and we’ll choose the winner on Friday.
Stephen James, M.A., and David Thomas, M.S.S.W., are speakers, authors, and therapists who work directly with boys and their families. They also travel around the country, speaking on parenting and marriage communication, and they have been dynamic guests on CBN’s Living the Life, Good Day Atlanta, WGN Midday News, Moody’s Midday Connection, and other radio programs coast to coast. Learn more at www.stephenanddavid.com.
ABOUT Katie
Katie is the former Editor-in-Chief of Blissfully Domestic and currently serves as Managing Editor o{read more}


We only have the one boy, so it’s hard sometimes because you don’t have a previvous example to go by, this one is it for us. This sounds like just the book for us, thanks for the recommendation.
Hey, I have two boys, a 6 year old and a 1 year old. I love watching them play together. Right now my 6 year old is teaching, or should I say trying to teach, my 1 year old how to play hide and seek. It’s just too precious.
I’d love to read this book.
Ok, I’ll bite. My boy (after two girls) is quite the conundrum! I keep looking at him and asking: Why does he DO htat? (Spitting, climbing, turning anything and everything in to a sword and so on!?)
Sounds like a great book – thanks!
~Amber
We almost lost our wild thing this fall when he fell ill to encephalitis. He was a month and a half in the Children’s National Medical Center and the National Center for Children’s Rehabilitation in Washington, DC, much of that time in the ICU. Every day during that time was a worry, but now is such a joy, as we are all together again at home. The funny thing was how much I was prepared to change everything when he returned. His reaction: I don’t want anything changed, not one thing, I want it all back to normal, as it was before. And that’s how it is.
Okay, I have 3 girls and no boys. But I have 2 really, really good friends with 2 little boys apiece. Would love to win the book for one of them.
My friend’s 4-year-old Star Wars freak son called her into the bathroom the other day and said, “Mom! My poop looks like Yoda!!” The funny thing? She said it really did.
Oh, how I could use such a book! My boys are 15 & almost 14. When my oldest was about 4, he tossed a tiny toy bunny and it landed on a swag over our living room door. In order to retrieve it, he was standing on the back of the couch against a wall perpendicular to the door and stuck bunny. In his hands was the string to our shades. He was preparing to run across the back of the couch, swing Tarzan-style across the living room to the doorway, and retrieve the bunny.
I stopped him before he went flying off the couch, shades in hand, and likely landing in a pile on the chair, underneath the shades!
That sounds like a good book!
Oh this looks like a good one! I would love to win this book! I have 4 girls & just had our first boy in March of 2008. I’m sure I could learn something from this book. Thanks for the opportunity!
My favorite story about my wild thing happened last month. On the way to church, my son said, “Merry Christmas, Mom”.
“Merry Christmas to you too, buddy,” I responded.
“What about Joseph Christmas?” he asked.
I didn’t have the heart to tell him it was not MARY Christmas…
A while ago my son decided his was not going to sit in his highchair any longer. So we’d try to let him sit at the table with us. But the lack of straps to hold him down resulted in him taking a bite and then getting down and running around. One night I was tired and didn’t feel like fighting him to sit still. The next thing I knew he was sitting a drawer in the kitchen with the butter smeared all over his hands and feet. You just never know what to expect!!
I would certainly love to read this book. I’m sure I would gain much from the authors’ insights in bringing up my three boys, aged 1, 3 and 5. Incidentally, Sendak’s book is one of their very favourite stories too. Thanks for the opportunity!
We have worked so hard to instill good manners in our 2 year old. It seems to have worked…
His mother hugged him the other night and told him she loved him more than anything in the world. He turned and replied, “Thank you very much, I appreciate that”. (He is 2 1/2!)
He is our greatest gift and our joy. Can’t wait to read the book, as we will take all the advice we can get.