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Beauty Junkies: Inside Our $15 Billion Obsession With Cosmetic Surgery
 
 
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Beauty Junkies: Inside Our $15 Billion Obsession With Cosmetic Surgery (Hardcover)

by Alex Kuczynski (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (34 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
A podiatrist shortens toes so her clients can fit into Jimmy Choos, and a lawyer who's argued before the Supreme Court routinely lies to a succession of doctors to feed his Botox habit. As this depressing survey of a global beauty business rooted in self-hatred and a fear of aging demonstrates, an unfortunate few are literally dying to be pretty: the Nigerian first lady expired after liposuction and a tummy tuck, and Olivia Goldsmith, whose novels lampooned middle-aged women afraid to look their age, succumbed during a chin tuck. New York Times reporter Kuczynski has attitude to spare as she outs Sarah Jessica Parker and Nicole Kidman as probable Botox users, and assesses the "traumatized" naked body of a litigator who's showing off the results of a total body lift after gastric-bypass surgery: "to be honest and brutal and bitchy, she doesn't look that great." A canny and witty guide to the excesses of a conformist society with more money than sense, Kuczynski discloses her own beauty addiction in the form of Botox, collagen derived from cadavers and fetal foreskin cells, liposuction, eyelid lifts and eventually a botched Restylane treatment that left her housebound for days with a disfigured lip.(Oct. 17)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From The Washington Post
Sometimes, out and about, I catch a stranger fixing me with a gimlet eye. Does she recognize me? Perhaps. I wrote a first-person story for Washingtonian magazine back in 1989 about getting a facelift -- with before-and-after mug shots on the cover. Maybe that stranger stashed it in a bedside drawer. I imagine her fishing it out after one of those blood-freezing flashes when she spots her own reflection in a shop window and thinks her mother's come to town.

Over the intervening 17 years, my own visage has slid back into its pre-lift contours. But millions more have surrendered to the knife, and a charming new vocabulary has been born: Carb Face, for example (puffy-cheeked); Bowling Ball Breasts; the Trout Pout; the Wind Tunnel (severely backswept facial skin); the Kabuki Mask (all-Botox, all the time). Mind-boggling new technologies have blossomed: lasers, microsurgeries, wrinkle fillers, wrinkle paralytics, power-assistant liposuction, endoscopic tricks and "thread lifts," in which barbed threads are stretched beneath the cheeks and anchored to the skull. Cheekbones are glorified with Gore-Tex, just like your L.L. Bean jacket. Gallons of collagen, cultivated in a vast petri dish from the stem cells of a single infant's foreskin, have been pumped into lips or nasolabial folds, an alternative to the locally fashionable "cadaver tissue," i.e., corpse flesh. (How do you know where it's been? Maybe you're sporting a snippet of dear old Alistair Cooke, whose own dead tissue went missing, in your kissable new Trout Pout.)

In New York, women have their toes trimmed to squeeze into pointy Jimmy Choo shoes. In Los Angeles, gals who've had everything else done now get genital beautification. Says one, "I've spent so much money for the rest of me to look like Dolly Parton. So why should that look like Willie Nelson?" Many under-40 men today think it perfectly normal for the breasts on a reclining woman to stand up like rockets at take-off.

The New York Times's racy feature writer Alex Kuczynski has written Beauty Junkies, an exposé of the cosmetic surgery industry. And she really knows her stuff. The 30-something beauty confesses that she hopped aboard the fix-me train at age 28. At first, it was just a couple of Botox shots to the brow. (Scowling over a computer all day, every writer knows, encourages piles, dowager's hump and eye trouble -- but exacts its most visible toll between the eyebrows.) Later, she was persuaded by her doctor to have her almond-shaped, slightly slanted blue eyes "fixed" to reduce the volume above the upper lid -- excising that enchanting, extended epicanthic fold that gives Charlotte Rampling, Kathleen Turner and, in an earlier generation, Simone Signoret their bedroom eyes. She's had lard lipo'd from her thighs. She's spent many thousands on "maintenance."

And finally, in 2004, in quest of that Angelina Jolie suck-the-chrome-off-a-trailer-hitch moue, she had her upper lip stuffed with Restylane, a mucus-like synthetic form of hyaluronic acid. It gave her a yam-sized Donald Duck disaster zone below her nose that kept her housebound for several days. That -- and the recognition that a friend had, in the course of various improvements, become a frightening "meat puppet" -- cured her of her addiction. Or so she says.

A few choice statistics, now, from her sumptuously fact-packed Beauty Junkies: In 2004, nearly 12 million surgical and nonsurgical beauty procedures were performed in the United States -- including 290,343 eyelid jobs, 166,187 nose jobs, 478,251 liposuctions and 334,052 breast augmentations. Despite the fact that those dense, high-cohesive silicone-gel European breast implants known as "gummi bears" are generally illegal here, it's estimated that a third of all artificial breasts in this country are "in trouble." Still, since 1997, breast implants are up 147 percent. Liposuction's up 111 percent; tummy tucks, 144 percent; and Botox use, 2,446 percent.

Kuczynski emphasizes the two harsh realities that steer these soaring numbers. First, boomers are graying more reluctantly than any previous generation. Second, with the current state of the health care game, many surgeons and dermatologists actually prefer big-bucks, high-satisfaction cosmetic work to, say, cancer surgery. Which would you rather do? Take 15 minutes to squirt a face full of Botox, and get $1,000 in cash and a stiffish smile in return? Or painstakingly remove a freckle, slice by panicky slice, over a full hour or more, and then, a couple of months later, get 12 bucks from a grudging insurance company?

At its core, of course, the rage for "age management" is a ghastly business. Beneath those glamorous Chiclet-tooth veneers may lurk stinking stubs that revolt even the dentists who created them from perfectly healthy teeth. Very fat people who have gastric bypasses (140,600 Americans in 2004) find their new slender bodies swimming in gigantic sacks of skin -- dangling aprons, flaps, curtains, folds and hammocks that actually shock the plastic surgeons who must tailor them to fit the new frame.

To avoid even approaching that fate, Hollywood gals turn to Clen -- clenbuterol, a steroid used to treat asthma in horses and to help the human body remain a size two. Clen also increases the risk of stroke and heart attack, destroys endurance and stiffens the heart muscles.

But as long ago as the 17th century, the wise François, duc de la Rochefoucauld, observed that, "One must suffer to be beautiful." Today, 73-year-old Joan Rivers wistfully adds, "I wish I had a twin, so I could know what I'd look like without plastic surgery." As for Kuczynski -- well, she's gone off the Botox.

Reviewed by Diana McLellan
Copyright 2006, The Washington Post. All Rights Reserved.

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Doubleday (October 17, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385508530
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385508537
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 5.8 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars See all reviews (34 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #155,640 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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    #11 in  Books > Nonfiction > Social Sciences > Sociology > Medicine

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Customer Reviews

34 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (34 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A History and an Awakening, November 23, 2006
This book has generated great buzz as written by a noted NY Times writer who becomes obsessed with plastic surgery at the age of 28 and have various procedures over the next ten years. It's an interesting story but it only occupies 15% of the book and is the closing.

Prior to that the book is an exhaustive summary of the history of plastic surgery dating back to the 1800s and sorted by the various body types being transposed, i.e., face,[..] botox, etc. Therefore the book is written somewhat as a clinical history until she closes with her personal story which is quite interesting. She uses herself as the new American who obsesses with not growing old and builds a compelling case that Americans will use more and more plastic surgery as some South American countries are currently experiencing.

Overall, a quality book on the subject. Personally, I preferred the recent "Confessions of a Park Avenue Plastic Surgeon" for a summary of the issue and more in depth personal stories from the perspective of doctor and patient.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent., December 17, 2006
By Gretchen C. Rubin (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I'm not much interested in cosmetic surgery (which is not the same as plastic surgery, one of the things I learned from the book), but I am a HUGE fan of Alex Kuczynski's work so will read anything she writes. For instance, I don't like shopping, but I always read her NYT column, Critical Shopper, just for the fun of it.

As I expected, I found this a fascinating book and whizzed through it in two days. Lots of great information. As the title indicates, this isn't a guide for people who are considering cosmetic surgery, but an analysis of the industry and the trends behind it. She throws in some of her own experiences, which are just as (or perhaps more) intriguing as the reportorial sections.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The boomers are making cosmetic surgery boom , October 27, 2006
There is a boom in the cosmetic surgery business, in part because the boomers are tipping sixty and want to remain young forever. Alex Kuczynski chronicles her own personal adventures in the world of Botox, chin tucks, eyebrow lifts etc etc. She tells the story of an Industry which is increasingly introducing new products to answer the demands of an appearance obsessed America. A tone of criticism, also self- criticism and ridicule is a fair and natural part of the work. And the tales of the mess-ups caused by certain procedures , and the money wasted on them is also a big part of the story.
The book is an informative guide to a subject which obsesses a lot of people.
Thinking of all this stuff in relation to myself I know I am simply not the type to go for, or want anyone close to me to go for such procedures. On the other hand as the white accumulates in the beard, and the hair becomes sparser on the head I sometimes look at the old old with a certain dread and simply fear the day when my very appearance may want to make others head for the exit. So I understand a certain kind of obsession with the subject.
I would only say I consider another American obsession, that with 'health' a far healthier one.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars A war tale from one who survived
Unlike myself, the author "becomes obsessed with plastic surgery at the age of 28 and [has] various procedures over the next ten years," which were eventually successful. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Jamieson Dale

4.0 out of 5 stars Informative and entertaining
An interesting look into the beauty industry. Creative, funny, and informative. I only gave it a 4 because of how it left me feeling. Read more
Published 19 months ago by C. Marshall

3.0 out of 5 stars Extreme Critic
The endless struggle against looking old or inadequate, the inability to accept the changing or imperfect body and face, coupled with the relentless promotion of the technology to... Read more
Published 21 months ago by Chan Joon Yee

4.0 out of 5 stars Scary, but good read.
Beauty Junkies, by Alex Kuczynski, gives us the history of plastic and cosmetic surgery, the charlatans, the risks, the popularity especially in the U.S. Read more
Published 23 months ago by Ergonomic Zester

3.0 out of 5 stars Informative chit chat
This book was an eye-opener for someone not familiar with cosmetic surgery and beauty procedures. Lots of interesting information but rather rambling and lots of spin on the info.
Published on May 14, 2007 by Fast Reader in CA

3.0 out of 5 stars beauty junkies
it is an overall goodbook,but one thing attracts the attention is that the author is very self centered. Read more
Published on March 13, 2007 by Eliana Saad Abboud

1.0 out of 5 stars This author needs a good copyeditor
Within a few pages, I found myself seriously wondering if I had accidently obtained an unedited copy of the book: the punctuation choices (or lack thereof) are baffling. Read more
Published on December 5, 2006 by S. Brooks

2.0 out of 5 stars NOT AT ALL WHAT I EXPECTED...
TOO BORING TO GO ANY FURTHER THAN THE FIRST SEVERAL CHAPTERS. I THUMBED THROUGH THE REST AND SAW IT WAS ALL THE SAME. Read more
Published on November 15, 2006 by BLONDIEPINK

5.0 out of 5 stars Snapshot of the Obsession to Stay Young!
Fascinated by plastic surgery but afraid to go under the knife? Kucynksi's explanation of why we torture ourselves to remain youthful is a great snapshot of America's obsession to... Read more
Published on November 8, 2006 by BookWoman/BookMan TV REVIEWS

5.0 out of 5 stars Alex explains it all.
Since we've never met "face-to-face" it may seem somewhat presumptuous on my part to address Ms. Kuczynski informally as "Alex", in fact, however, the great success of Beauty... Read more
Published on November 7, 2006 by Joanne & the Dogs

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