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- Newsgroups: rec.arts.books
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wupost!csus.edu!netcom.com!dani
- From: dani@netcom.com (Dani Zweig)
- Subject: QPB Blurbs
- Message-ID: <1992Dec25.012127.26853@netcom.com>
- Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
- Date: Fri, 25 Dec 1992 01:21:27 GMT
- Lines: 32
-
- The Quality Paperback Book Club is often its own worst enemy. It's often
- hard to guess whether a book will be as bad as the blurb suggests.
-
- William Manchester's 318-page history of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance,
- "A World Lit Only by Fire" seemed more likely to be entertaining than
- informative, but there's nothing wrong with that. Besides, His Bicentennial
- effort, "The Glory and the Dream", is one of my favorite social histories.
- So QPBC had a sale -- until I got to the part of the blurb about "Lucrezia
- Borgia, the bastard daughter of a pope, whose hedonistic reputation
- survives to this day; and Ferdinand Magellan, "the era's greatest hero,"
- who disproved the medieval notion that the world's flat." Do I want to
- pay $12.95 plus shipping to find out whether that's a fair reflection
- of the book?
-
- Then there's "Ask Your Angels", whose blurb ends with "...the authors
- of Ask Your Angels set out to show how we can draw on the power of
- angels to reconnect to our lost inner selves and to achieve our
- goals, whether they be better relationships, healing an illness or
- recovery from addiction... From the archangel Gabriel to the Earth
- Angel to your own companion angel, Ask Your Angels shows how these
- celestial beings can be a doorway to the divine." Did someone
- really sit down and say "this blurb will motivate a reasonable
- number of QPBC subscribers to buy this book"? Maybe appropriating
- other cultures' spirituality isn't such a bad idea.
-
- -----
- Dani Zweig
- dani@netcom.com
-
- If you're going to write, don't pretend to write down. It's going to be the
- best you can do, and it's the fact that it's the best you can do that kills
- you! -- Dorothy Parker
-