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Unzipped

Unzipped

List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $29.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Oh The Places You'll Go
Review: A fun quick read. Very titillating with an interesting cast of characters which are real people. From the male perspective, I found this book delivered some excellent insight into relationship (and sexual) dilemmas. Also, it was light on the psycho-babble and offered meaty, if a little oversexed, observations. A must read if you want a better understanding of your date/flame.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A delicious page-turner
Review: A really great and fast read. I loved it. It's really well written and amazing frank and funny. It's a great book to take to the beach or spend a lazy Sunday reading.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Star Is Born
Review: A really great and fast read. I loved it. It's really well written and amazing frank and funny. It's a great book to take to the beach or spend a lazy Sunday reading.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: You sure it's 'Extraordinary'?
Review: An interesting non-fiction book on "the extraordinary sex lives of ordinary people".

Perhaps it's the openness in our society now, but I've failed to see what was so "extraordinary" about the sex lives of the people in the book.

Take Marie, a hairdresser who encouraged her husband to look for sex with others during her pregnancy, albeit jokingly, and got what she wanted. It is in my opinion that such things are happening all around us and that there is nothing shocking or alarming to it.

Guys and girls looking for a partner but at the same time sleeping around, women trying to find a husband and going through relationships that fail one after another; these are all nothing 'extraordinary'. I would think that the 'e' word was used with injustice for this book.

The main theme of the book is not about sex, but the role of it and how sex changes a relationship and the dating game.

I got tired of the book after awhile and there is nothing "funny" in it, as the backcover claimed. It is, however, fast moving but not an easy read.

Read this to help you get to sleep.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: You sure it's 'Extraordinary'?
Review: An interesting non-fiction book on "the extraordinary sex lives of ordinary people".

Perhaps it's the openness in our society now, but I've failed to see what was so "extraordinary" about the sex lives of the people in the book.

Take Marie, a hairdresser who encouraged her husband to look for sex with others during her pregnancy, albeit jokingly, and got what she wanted. It is in my opinion that such things are happening all around us and that there is nothing shocking or alarming to it.

Guys and girls looking for a partner but at the same time sleeping around, women trying to find a husband and going through relationships that fail one after another; these are all nothing 'extraordinary'. I would think that the 'e' word was used with injustice for this book.

The main theme of the book is not about sex, but the role of it and how sex changes a relationship and the dating game.

I got tired of the book after awhile and there is nothing "funny" in it, as the backcover claimed. It is, however, fast moving but not an easy read.

Read this to help you get to sleep.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Modern Sex and the Single Girl
Review: Courtney Weaver's wry humor about the benefits and disadvantages of the singleton's condition is a delicious tonic. From the first page I was hooked into her female friends' diverse, funny, and sometimes appalling love lives. It's gratifying to read such an intelligent and insightful account of what real women think and talk about, and have a good belly laugh about it at the same time. The characters and their problems are easy to identify with, and it's a book that I feel all of my girlfriends would be happy to have.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: From a GUY who read it
Review: I picked this book up for the same reason that I pick up a Cosmo at the grocery store checkout every once in a while -- to get a flavor for what hip young women supposedly think about relationships and sex. I was not disappointed . . . at least at first.

I zipped through the first 100 or so pages, enthralled by the insidious, gossipy quality of it all. The wry humor was initially amusing but eventually began to wear on me. I think maybe it was just too much of something best imbibed in small portions. For example, I love "Seinfeld" but don't think I would be able to stand a feature-length movie starring those characters.

I think what soured me on the book in the end was the realization that I really didn't LIKE any of the characters. The women were all neurotic, self-obsessed, and shallow. The guys actually come off much better (which I DO NOT think was the author's intention) because they seem comfortable with who they are.

As a thirtyish guy who is suddenly "out there" after a failed ten-year marriage, I found this depiction of single life depressing. While I realize that it was at least partly fiction and probably intended as satire, its depiction of the relationship games that singles play (especially women) made me want to flee to a monastery.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An author is born
Review: I rarely pay hardcover prices but after accidentally catching a few minutes of Ms. Weaver at a local reading (I sat down and stayed until the end - as did many other browsers), I immediately bought three copies for friends. Her witty observations in Unzipped are not to be missed, and her unique vantage point affords us all a good seat in the human comedy. Treat yourself to this delightful debut....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Modern Sex and the Single Girl
Review: In the past, I have read Weaver's column in Salon and roared with laughter and sometimes recognition. Now she has finally gotten between hard cover (no pun intended) and we all get to enjoy her wit and intelligence. The New York Times said it true when they called her charming -- she is. Yet she also nimbly transcends the glib and offers an empathic look at the tangled world in which we triumph, frolic, and sometimes flail. Buy this book for every woman you know with a brain and a sense of humor. I await her next work with anticipation....

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Wicked and wise
Review: In the past, I have read Weaver's column in Salon and roared with laughter and sometimes recognition. Now she has finally gotten between hard cover (no pun intended) and we all get to enjoy her wit and intelligence. The New York Times said it true when they called her charming -- she is. Yet she also nimbly transcends the glib and offers an empathic look at the tangled world in which we triumph, frolic, and sometimes flail. Buy this book for every woman you know with a brain and a sense of humor. I await her next work with anticipation....


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