Imitation is the Sincerest Form of Plagiarism
We're seeing double and for once it's not the Dubra. Has married life left New York magazine dating columnist, Amy Sohn, a bit low on material?
From Salon's March 18th article, "Wife Shop":
Peter was my first wife-shopper, but not the last. Reports of these kinds of encounters — with men who investigate your family's disease history over a get-to-know-you beer or decide after two dinners to invite you on vacation with their college roommates and their wives — have become increasingly common among my female friends, urban women often assumed to be husband hunting themselves. In some cases, the men we're meeting are more interested in settling down than we are — almost as though they have their own internal biological clocks.
From NY mag's April 25th article, "Watching the Clock":
...although some guys still insist on sowing their wild oats before looking for wife material, others are functioning more like women, with an internal biological clock that makes them want to procreate with every cute, smart woman they meet. They bring up marriage and kids in the first few dates and know stroller brands the way some men know speaker systems. What s surprising is how frequently these men get rebuffed when they reveal this to the women they re dating.
Hey, Amy, we hear Redbook is hiring... —NH
Wife Shop [Salon]
Biological Clocks — Men Have Them, Too [NY mag]
