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62 of 64 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This Book Saved Me from the Siren Song of the 60's,
By
This review is from: Sex and The Single Girl: Before There Was Sex in the City, There Was (Cult Classics) (Paperback)
Isn't that an odd thing to say about a book whose title starts with the word "sex?"
Well, around 1964 one of my parents brought this book home, although neither of them would ever confess to the deed. Whoever it was, they did me a big favor. When the folks weren't watching, I swiped the book and devoured it in a single long sitting. Helen Gurley Brown should have entitled this masterwork "All the Hard-Nosed Things that Young Women in the So-Called Pre-Feminist Era Need to Know about Money, Career, Independence, Women's Rights, and The Way Things Unfortunately Are. And Oh Yes, Sex. That." However, the book would undoubtedly have sold fewer copies if the title had truly reflected the contents, so it's just as well they hyped the sex part. Under the impression that I was going to get to read some really naughty stuff, I studied Brown's book with the intensity I would later reserve for pre-calculus. Brown was the friendly, more experienced adult ("Aunt Helen," I liked to think of her) who cut the BS and told you how it really was with respect to a number of important subjects, often contradicting the messages of the dominant 60's culture, as it materialized later in the decade. Money? Girl, Woodstock or not, you will need it when you are no longer "pristinely young," so get a career and earn it. You will appreciate the freedom and self-respect it brings you. Do the very best you can with whatever abilities you have and the education you can get, and the rewards will carry you through the inevitable bad times that everybody faces. Beauty? Even if you are gorgeous, don't put all your eggs in that basket, because your beauty will fade, and then where will you be if that's the only card you ever played? Love? It is NOT all you need, no matter what the Beatles say. Marriage? Fine, fabulous (Brown herself has been married over forty years), but don't pin all your reasons for living - or your financial survival -- on a guy. Guys are just fallible human beings. Don't give up your ability to stand on your own two feet when you fall in love, because there are no guarantees in life, ever. As Brown eloquently put it, in middle age (or at any time before) a man can leave a woman "like dishes in the sink" if he wants to badly enough. Exercise and a healthy diet? Essential to self-respect. Property ownership (or at least having a fine apartment)? Also essential, particularly when you get older; living in a garage apartment furnished with orange crates is cute when you're twenty, but pathetic when you're forty. I came of age in the late 60's and early 70's, when the culture was telling us to tune in, turn on, and drop out. Don't conform, don't join the establishment, don't become the man or the woman in the gray flannel suit, don't throw away your life working and forget to smell the roses. Follow your dreams and the universe will magically provide. This was good advice as far as it went. It sounded so great, and it really was well meant and idealistic and heartfelt...if only it had been true. Unfortunately, it should have been taken with a small but healthy dose of skepticism. Such as, yes, do follow your dreams, but along the way learn some marketable skills, okay? However, the cultural mindset discouraged us from planning for the future, or thinking seriously about money, financial issues, and practical things. We might have known with our minds that the Woodstock generation would eventually get much, much older, but we didn't believe it. I, however, had Aunt Helen whispering in my ear, so around age thirty I finally rolled up my sleeves, quit hanging out in Austin drinking dark beer and swimming in Barton Springs, and got an advanced degree and a good job -- but did plan things so I still had some time to smell the roses. I couldn't have done it without her advice. At the end of the day, although Brown was not considered a "real" feminist, and in fact came in for a great deal of scorn on that account, she helped me every bit as much as the rest of them. She wasn't into rhetoric, ideology, or internecine wars with the sisters, she just gave good hardheaded advice about the way things were, like it or not, that's city hall so just deal with it. She liked men. They were people, they had their problems, but generally they were pretty nice. This was quite a relief to those of us who liked them too, even though there were times when it wasn't politically correct to dwell on it. She just didn't believe that liking men required her to give up everything else worthwhile in life, or her ability to provide for herself. Yeah yeah, like just about everybody else I take issue with her rather Darwinian attitude about carrying on with married men. However, as the writer Molly Ivins would say, she had the guts to tell young women how the cow ate the cabbage. I honor her for that.
18 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Hooray!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Sex and the Single Girl (Paperback)
Wonderful! Helen Gurley Brown was a real trailblazer. Many people make fun of her, but she was one of the first women in the popular press to declare that women are sexual creatures, too--real human beings with desires, fears and ambitions. Thank you, Helen. You're not perfect and I don't always agree with you, but you were one of the most influential 20th-century feminists.
16 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A mix of fun : ) and questionable advice,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sex and The Single Girl: Before There Was Sex in the City, There Was (Cult Classics) (Paperback)
I'm a fan of relationship books for women and suddenly realized I'd never read the Mother of them all. HGB's cult classic is charmingly written (without her trademark overuse of italics, thank goodness!) and contains some good advice ... mixed in with the bad.
She exhorts single women to be prudent with their money, glam up their looks and to have an exciting social circle. All this is in addition to giving advice on when, where and how to meet attractive, successful men. Plus she gives some great recipes for entertaining. Read closely and you'll get some wonderful tips! On the OTHER hand, she's quite cavalier about the ethics of dating married men and of having affairs with your coworkers even at the risk of endangering one's job. OK, so we can't legislate or dicatate our feelings. However, blatently encouraging such disruptive behavior is another issue altogether. In today's litigious climate I find this counsel questionable, especially to young, naive college grads who look up to Cosmo as "The Bible".
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
savvy woman, savvy advice,
By A Customer
This review is from: Sex and The Single Girl: Before There Was Sex in the City, There Was (Cult Classics) (Paperback)
For someone like myself who has grown up with "everything is relative, make your own way, be yourself etc etc" you may be craving advice that doesn't just "sit on the fence."This book is like having a naughty aunt whisper in your ear the "real facts" of life, love, men, apartments, food. Some advice may be a little dated, but curiously, not as much as you think. My favourite quote, and there are many of them, is "When you work for toads, drain the pond..." I've repeated this to myself I sincerely hope Helen is still living life to the fullest. It's a fun read.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Mrs. Brown, you are the best!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Sex and The Single Girl: Before There Was Sex in the City, There Was (Cult Classics) (Paperback)
My sisters and I devoured Helen Gurley Brown's "Having It All" back in the 80s, so we were delighted to hear that her first book was back in print. It is a gem! Mrs. Brown attacks her perennial subject, that of taking charge, taking yourself and your endeavors seriously, and making the most of your life, with her characteristic vigor, honesty, and humor. This book talks not only about love and marriage, but about work, diet and health, entertaining, personal finance, style...no subject is too mundane for Mrs. Brown's lively investigation and commentary. Even the bits that are dated offer a fascinating window into another era and only serve to highlight what a zesty forerunner Mrs. Brown is and was. If you believe (or would like to) that your life is worth living well NOW, grab a copy of this book before it goes out of print again!
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fabulous!,
By JAK in WDC (Washington, DC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sex and The Single Girl: Before There Was Sex in the City, There Was (Cult Classics) (Paperback)
When you consider that this book was written well before the 60's started swinging it is truly a wonder. Helen Gurley Brown gives some very sound advice on how to really LIVE as a single woman at a time when if you weren't married by age 25 you were doomed. You have to watch your finances and buy quality items of clothing and above all don't be afraid to be fabulous. Let a married man take you out for dinner and cocktails or buy you lovely things if it makes him happy. Most shockingly, you can have intimate relations with several men and not end up a sad and broken woman! Some advice is amazingly current: She describes what is essentially a low-carb diet as the road to health. Some ideas are also jarringly outdated: The idea that homosexuality was the result of arrested emotional development. But for most of it you can just hear the collective AAaaahhhhh of women being freed from the restrictions of the 1950's and being told "Yes, you CAN have just as much fun as the boys!"
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Sound advice for the 1960s...but HGB is not the Dali Lama.,
By Amber Berglund (Halethorpe, MD) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sex and the Single Girl (Paperback)
I read this book when I was 15 years old. I think one must read this book in the context of the social atmosphere of the 1960s. Consider first, what it meant to be a single woman before feminism really took off in the United States. Most of her advice is very sound: Educate yourself, dress well for your budget, personalize your look, maintain your hair and make-up, read and feel free to experience life.
Some of her advice, I think, is borderline-psychotic. In this book, Helen Gurley Brown encourages the single woman to "lift" things like lipstick and nailpolish from the dime store. She also stands by "The wine diet"...basically telling girls to drink wine instead of eating, to maintain a lithe figure. This, in my opinion, is insane. She also advises using dry shampoo. But, remember, this was back in a time where women didn't wash their own hair. They would go to the beauty salon once a week for a "wash & set" to lacquer their hair into unmovable shape. While reading this book, keep in mind that feminism really hadn't swept the country, and affairs between executives and their office assistants was expected...regardless of marital status. I don't think "Sexual Harrasment" became a public issue until after this book was published. Read this book with a grain of salt. Even though a good chunk of her advice is out-of-date, some of it is sound and rational. It's a great snap-shot of the 1960s pre-feminist mindset.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
HGB was even wiser than we thought, and still plenty funny,
By Jim Andrews "Wayne Brasler" (Chicago, Illinois USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sex and The Single Girl: Before There Was Sex in the City, There Was (Cult Classics) (Paperback)
I well remember when this book came out and caused an instant sensation and plentiful moral outrage. It was a guilty read. But also a wise, intelligent and savvy piece of work, as well as being hilarious. I think a lot of us back then thought Helen Gurley Brown was a real talent and were not surprised when she became editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan and presto chango made it the hottest magazine in the world (and a bible on college campuses). Now, in retrospect, after all these years, I'm thinking Mrs. Brown was even more talented than we knew and certainly a visionary. Her advice, which seemed so outrageous then, is above all practical and now seems totally reasonable. I own every book she's ever written and can tell you she is incapable of writing anything dull or dumb. If you don't know this classic, get it, you'll love it and it even has recipes!
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good Book,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sex and The Single Girl: Before There Was Sex in the City, There Was (Cult Classics) (Paperback)
I read Sex and The Single Girl after I had saw the movie. I really enjoyed the book, I am not in the age range that book is for. I'm only 20, but I figured all single women are somewhat the same. I think it's a great read, and every woman no matter what age should read it. Just women need to keep in mind that the book was written years ago, and things and stores have changed. But other then that totally get it.
5.0 out of 5 stars
great period book and applicable-somewhat,
By Sally May (Texas) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Sex and The Single Girl: Before There Was Sex in the City, There Was (Cult Classics) (Paperback)
you'd love it if you like mad men, but it's a great read and applicable today in many parts (not all)
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Sex and the Single Girl by Helen Gurley Brown (Paperback - June 1983)
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