Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Drinking, Smoking, and Screwing: Great Writers on Good Times

Drinking, Smoking, and Screwing: Great Writers on Good Times

List Price: $13.95
Your Price: $10.46
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Excellent failure
Review: A collection of essays and reminiscences about what the title says, written or set in the first three-quarters of the twentieth century. The editor's purpose, according to Shacochis's introduction, is to show that we have now become humorless puritans and that D S and S are victimless indulgences. There was once a happier time when we were less inhibited about these things and life was the better for it.
This purpose fails. Victims abound. The male authors (all heterosexual) come across as boasting about sexual conquests. Erica Jong cheerfully describes a rape and Nabokov describes you-know-what. St. Paul would have found a lot of justification here.
The drinkers all seem to be problem drinkers and I can't say the smokers make their habit sound positively enjoyable.
However there is some wonderful writing from a starry assembly of the century's finest American writers (if we included Nabokov and Anais Nin as American). Some of the humor dates a little. For example Art Buchwald's satire on wine talk has been repeated many times (although I don't think anyone has improved on Thurber's "It's a naïve little burgundy but I think you'll be amused at its pretensions.")
It's well worth reading. I don't think it will lead anyone astray.



Rating: 4 stars
Summary: What a Great Concept
Review: I found this an entertaining introduction into the work of some great authors I hadn't read before, and of course the subject matter is fascinating.

I realized part way through that this is a very modern American product. Take short excerpts of famous writers works that involve debauchery, have it short enough to read in a couple of days, and market with bright red, white and blue with the word SCREWING on the cover. Maybe this is an ingenious way to hook regular Joes into reading a little good literature. In any case it worked for me.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great writers, good writing
Review: I picked this up because it had a Richard Brautigan poem in it. Turned out to be one I already had. Anyway, the title's pretty self-explanatory. Short stories, novel excerpts, and a few poems with similar topics. The authors included are indeed some of the best. My favorites were by Spalding Gray, Mary McCarthy, Corey Ford, J.P. Donleavy, Terry Southern and Mason Hoffenberg, and James Thurber. The one I hated most was by Fran Lebowitz.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: You'll be hooked!
Review: It is rare that the vices mentioned in the title of this book get the fair, impartial treatment that is shown here. Too often, writers (especially modern) take either the "moral high ground" and decry such behavior or attempt to glorify it mindlessly with no regard for its consequences. Neither make for very interesting reading. With a few minor exceptions, this collection, however, discusses drinking, smoking, and screwing with a nod to both our intellect and our basest instincts. Truly a book with both an open mind and open eyes.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Bedtime Reading For Marvellously Twisted Adults
Review: It's a puritanical society we live in, and it sucks. This book makes for a fine release from that straightjacket.

This fabulous short story collection is pure, unadulterated (perhaps adulterous?), almost-illegal fun. Bukowski's unabashedly macho "Women", Erica Jong's Zipless...(can I say the word in a public review?), Eve Babitz's revelations on something called "The Green Death" (I must find some one day and see if it really is that good); well, it's everything your mother and the Surgeon General told you not to do, but you do anyway. Or at least you should.

Speaking of the Surgeon General, my favorite here is Fran Lebowitz's "When Smoke Gets In Your Eyes...Shut Them" (page 192), and I quote from it quite often in today's smokist, nicotine gum, get the patch society. For air pollution and my blood pressure, one would do better outlawing those pretentious, gas guzzling Suburban Utility Vehicles. I suspect that many of the writers in this book BECAME writers to be able to smoke on the job in peace.

I would quibble with a few of the inclusions. For instance, I would have used Anne Sexton's "Fury Of The Cocks" instead if "When A Man Enters A Woman". I would have picked one of Dorthy Parkers acerbic poems about love and sex rather than using "You Were Perfectly Fine". I would have left out the "Lotlita" excerpt altogether for something more overtly satisfying and taboo, such as Pat Califia's "Calyx of Isis". And I'd never have even touched the vapid, sexist, nonsensical and needlessly trashy "Candy", by Southern and Hoffenberg, which is in this collection is rather like a pimple on the chest of an otherwise exquisitely beautiful stripper.

However, the good "bad" stuff more than makes up for the, well, bad "bad" stuff, and this is a book I go back to again and again. Call it my bedtime reading, if you will....a book that goes deliciously well with a good Dunhill cigarette, a nice shot of Baileys, and a half dressed...oh, nevermind. There are kids here.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: fun book!
Review: This collection of writings on the "fun" things in life is entertaining and indulgent. A good read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: fun book!
Review: This collection of writings on the "fun" things in life is entertaining and indulgent. A good read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: :)
Review: What an excellent read. Drinking, Smoking, and Screwing is an excellent collection of laugh out loud literature. I could not put it down. A definite must-read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: :)
Review: What an excellent read. Drinking, Smoking, and Screwing is an excellent collection of laugh out loud literature. I could not put it down. A definite must-read.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates