by ScissorMan ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 17, 2015
Readers may appreciate some of this book’s sewing tips, but it falls short as a more general guide to revitalizing marital...
This marital advice book by the pseudonymous author ScissorMan offers an unusual idea: cutting up a spouse’s clothes.
The author isn’t a therapist or researcher, but he writes that he’s been in a loving, sexually active marriage for 50 years. In this book, he shares his ideas about what makes his marriage work. His main strategy for adding variety to their sex life, he says, is to make various revealing outfits for his wife instead of buying expensive lingerie. He doesn’t pretend to have advanced sewing experience; instead, he’s found less skill-intensive ways to modify thrift-store clothes for use in the bedroom. His book offers some helpful illustrations of these methods but no step-by-step diagrams. There’s a lot of creativity involved here, and some of the ideas may be inspiring for couples who are interested in this type of play. There seems to be a certain lack of awareness, however, that the idea may not appeal to every reader. The book also includes lectures about how men think, and other chapters make specific reference to the Bible and to other marriage advice books. The author admonishes wives to maintain their physical appearances for their husbands’ benefit and also reminds women of the Biblical teaching to respect their husbands: “Lack of respect is also probably the main cause of marital problems by women who have been brainwashed by the Feminist Movement,” he says. Unfortunately, this idea places much of the burden of repairing a marriage on the wife. Such conservative thoughts about gender roles and marriage seem at odds with the book’s explicit tone, and they may alienate readers who would have otherwise taken an interest in the clothing.
Readers may appreciate some of this book’s sewing tips, but it falls short as a more general guide to revitalizing marital sex.Pub Date: Sept. 17, 2015
ISBN: 978-0-9837189-1-8
Page Count: 250
Publisher: Master Lover Publishing
Review Posted Online: Nov. 24, 2015
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by George F. Custen ‧ RELEASE DATE: Nov. 12, 1997
An effective, in-depth evaluation of the life and work of the master movie mogul. One increasingly circulated variation on the auteur theory holds that certain remarkable producers, like Zanuck, have had a profound shaping influence on the movies they oversaw. But even in these terms, Zanuck enjoyed a remarkable, perhaps unique career. With close to 1,000 movies to his credit, he painstakingly crafted (working at an extraordinary level of detail) an unprecedented string of noteworthy—and usually successful—films, from All About Eve to The Grapes of Wrath and How Green Was My Valley. As Custen (Performing Arts/CUNY, Staten Island) notes, Zanuck ``would not give up the belief that although filmmaking was a collaborative enterprise, ultimately he and he alone possessed the judgment to successfully run the machinery of storytelling and to regulate the enterprise surrounding it.'' Zanuck was also responsible for any number of cinematic milestones. From the first major talkie, The Jazz Singer, to the first gangster movies, to Cinemascope, he had a sixth sense for surprising the public with its own unsuspected wants. As Custen demonstrates, Zanuck, an artiste among businessmen, was quite unlike any of the other men who ran studios. He came to Hollywood during the Silent Era, vaguely determined to be a writer. His real break came with his creation of the Rin Tin Tin series. From there he giddily ascended to the control of his own studio at the age of 31, a position he maintained until he was in his 50s, when in the fit of a middle-age crisis he moved to Europe and pursued a peripatetic and priapic existence, producing occasional movies as the mood took him. While Custen's story has great legs, his writing suffers from feet of clay—he can't resist constantly repeating himself. Nonetheless, a significant reappraisal of a major, often neglected, moviemaker. (16 pages b&w photos, not seen)
Pub Date: Nov. 12, 1997
ISBN: 0-465-07619-X
Page Count: 400
Publisher: Basic Books
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 1997
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by Emerson Klees ‧ RELEASE DATE: May 1, 2008
Relevant but reductive.
In a three-volume set, Klees boils down an estimable collection of legend, lore and literature in an attempt to make classic writings relevant to today.
In composing his new anthology, Klees retells (often in truncated form) some 110 well-known stories. Each twice-told tale is accompanied by a succinct moral that delivers to the reader in quick strokes what the author believes to be the tale’s ethical content. In the process, he brings together a wide-ranging and fascinating variety of stories that draw upon the mythology of many nations and cultures, from Native American lore (“The Legend of Hiawatha”) to biblical myth (the story of Job) to more modern prose (Twain’s Tom Sawyer). Most frequently, Klees simply paraphrases extant material–a sometimes dubious technique given that he pulls from some of the most enduring literature in history. However, his summaries are largely successful, thanks in no small part to a levelheaded narrative style. The author never tries to outdo his lofty predecessors, and is more likely to cleave closely–and sometimes with obsessive care–to their prose than skip out in flights of fancy. Many readers might agree with the collection’s implied thesis–that much literature and legend carries real moral weight. However, there is something oddly reductive about the project. To suggest that the some of the greatest stories ever told can be distilled to a pithy ethical statement seems simplistic and perhaps naïve. Take, as only one example, Klees’s “moral” for Leo Tolstoy’s beautifully nuanced short story “How Much Land Does a Man Need?”: “Greed is not a desirable trait. Blatant greed can be death of you.” Does the author really need to trot out the greatest Russian author of all time to deride avarice? And does such a précis do justice to what Joyce considered the best story ever written? It seems unlikely.
Relevant but reductive.Pub Date: May 1, 2008
ISBN: 978-1-891046-21-7
Page Count: -
Publisher: N/A
Review Posted Online: May 23, 2010
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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