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Endangered Pleasures: In Defense of Naps, Bacon, Martinis, Profanity, and Other Indulgences

Endangered Pleasures: In Defense of Naps, Bacon, Martinis, Profanity, and Other Indulgences

List Price: $12.00
Your Price: $9.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Simple Pleasures; Your Day is Cram-Packed with Them!
Review: Anyone that enjoys walking bare-footed, happy hour, spending money, undressing, the joys of travel, the occasional use of a "bad" word, Christmas, dogs and cats, and books, among other things, gets a "thumbs up" from me.

You'd be hard-pressed not to like this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Simple Pleasures; Your Day is Cram-Packed with Them!
Review: As I read this book, I imagined all the self-righteous spoilsports in the world clucking and shaking their heads. "Drinking? Smoking? Eating? How sad that anyone would like such things!" Meanwhile, they count their carbs and powerwalk their way to self-delusion.

This is a great book to make you realize that life is for living and we weren't put on this earth just to worry. Real pleasures are simple and cheap and too easily overlooked. Fancy clothes, comfortable clothes, getting up early, staying up late, even going to an office, there is a lot of enjoyment in each and every day, if you just take the time to notice.

Enjoy yourself! This book gives you all the permission you need.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: For those of you who are Pleasure Seekers...
Review: I was intrigued by the title of this book so I had to get it. I needed to learn about endangered pleasures that I may not be participating in. I was reminded of the pleasures of taking naps & sleeping 'totally' undressed (without constraints) & traveling & barefeet & natural things like birds singing. It was a nice book with some worthwhile lines & PLEASURES 'to live by'. I'm just happy to know that I've been living by the book so far. Life can be a pleasure. If it's not for you...get this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Temptation Well-Remembered and Written in "Pleasures."
Review: In "Driving Beltless," one of 67 essays forming "Endangered Pleasures," author/temptress Barbara Holland writes that driving without seat belts, once considered "a basic civil right," now "takes its place with Eve's apple among the heady stolen pleasures."

Hidden among the summer shade trees of her Bluemont, VA home, Holland writes as a modern day Eve chronicling hidden, missing pleasures in a nostalgic, suburban Eden. Her curmudgonous "Wasn't The Grass Greener" finds her post-expulsion, wistfully remembering telegrams, clotheslines, radiators and tangible, fading societal remnants. Here she praises seasonal, small, slightly sinful luxuries readily available if occassionally politically incorrect.

Sensuality rules "Endangered Pleasures" in taste (coffee, martinis, even cigarettes), touch (bare feet, naked bodies in shower, bath and bed, wearing fur in an apologetic essay) sound (songs of youth, whistling, profanity), and above all, sight ( July 4, Christmas, books and morining paper, emotional blankets covering the four seasons, travel modes and motivations). Holland also indulges in slight sins of lust (morning sex), gluttony (justifications of the day's three meals), schadenfreude (her section on disasters and crowd behavior after the Phillies' 1980 World Series win) and supposed sloth (her defense of working and not working, and of gardening as a form of work, are alone worth the book price).

Holland also understands small, measurable triumphs of early childhood ("the first 10 or 12 years are just one triumph after another") early adulthood ("We studied for the career of being adults...we thought we had to have opinions on everything.")and parenthood ("Having a child around is more fun than being one, since we're free to leave the small world for the large one whenever we get bored.")

Some Holland-praised pleasures became unpopular for understandable, if not completely agreeable, reasons. But she correctly states many benign indulgences fell to what author Robert Ringer called "absolute morality," a governmental/societal/Puritanical mindset distrusting and discouraging pleasure as immoral and unfair while praising pain and self-denial as noble and necessary. Authors like Barbara Holland and books like "Endangered Pleasures" remind us life is too short to take too seriously or studiously, or to deny self without greater purpose. Like chocolate fudge cake, "Endangered Pleasures" should be enjoyed rarely in small slices, but enjoyed to its fullest nonetheless.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Highly indulgent and addictive
Review: In a time in which responsible adults are encouraged to strictly adhere to high fiber-low fat diets, long work hours and serious workouts, Holland's essays seem delightfully sinful as she extolls the virtues of such pleasures as leisure time, red meat and martinis. The best way to read this book? On a Saturday morning, sipping coffee, when you should be working.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Cozy is good
Review: It's refreshing to read a book that celebrates the little things in life that make things more bearable. Ms. Holland is one of my favorite authors. She never disappoints.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Justification for all the things we really want to do!
Review: Ms. Holland has provided me with extensive support for all of those guilty pleasures I too often deny myself. She tells me why I should enjoy going to work, playing tourist while on vacation, hanging around the house doing nothing, eating and drinking - an all around reckless life. I leave a copy of this book in my guest room and have awaken to chuckles and guffaws, and visitors with a renewed sense of indulgence. If you ever feel guilty, buy and read this book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of my all time favorites
Review: Ms. Holland is one of my favorite authors and this is my favorite of her books. This is one to treasure, to reread when life is looking particularly dreary. In "Endangered Pleasures" Ms. Holland looks at many of the things we've given up on the advice of the government, our doctors and other do-gooders. Bacon (yum), naps, calling out sick, cursing, all the things we're not supposed to do or enjoy because they're bad for our health, the economy, the nation. Read this on the bus, you'll get a seat to yourself because other riders will move away from you because you're laughing outloud.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of my all time favorites
Review: Ms. Holland is one of my favorite authors and this is my favorite of her books. This is one to treasure, to reread when life is looking particularly dreary. In "Endangered Pleasures" Ms. Holland looks at many of the things we've given up on the advice of the government, our doctors and other do-gooders. Bacon (yum), naps, calling out sick, cursing, all the things we're not supposed to do or enjoy because they're bad for our health, the economy, the nation. Read this on the bus, you'll get a seat to yourself because other riders will move away from you because you're laughing outloud.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Justifies your bad habits and downfalls...
Review: This book was so good to read--Barbara Holland gives a 1-3 page defense of several habits that are generally looked at in a negative light. She defends barefeet, sleeping in, unemployment, cussing someone out, gambling, etc. It was such a pleasure to read--so many good quotes inside. A nice short read that will put a smile on your face.


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