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Crazy Little Thing: Why Love and Sex Drive Us Mad Paperback – December 13, 2011
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length262 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherViva Editions
- Publication dateDecember 13, 2011
- Dimensions5 x 0.8 x 8 inches
- ISBN-101936740036
- ISBN-13978-1936740031
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Editorial Reviews
From the Back Cover
There are plenty of books that offer advice about how to find or keep love in your life. But what can we learn from those who've gone to the extremes of love and desire? Liz Langley answers that question inCrazy Little Thing, a light-hearted look at the science of why we long for love. She deciphers how the burbling, boiling soup of endorphins, hormones and neurotransmitters that spill from our brain make us do things, in the name of love, that would otherwise be viewed as insane. From the greatest breakup story ever told to the psychologists and scientists who can explain our bad behavior, Langley reveals the control our chemicals have over us in this hilarious, confounding and too-strange-to-be-anything-but-true look at love.
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Viva Editions; 0 edition (December 13, 2011)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 262 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1936740036
- ISBN-13 : 978-1936740031
- Item Weight : 10.3 ounces
- Dimensions : 5 x 0.8 x 8 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #9,892,025 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #7,552 in Sociology of Marriage & Family (Books)
- #29,584 in Emotional Self Help
- #36,126 in Love & Romance (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book insightful and well-researched. They find it entertaining, funny, and memorable. The stories are described as unusual, quirky, and wonderful. Readers describe the book as one of the best on the subject of love since Leo Buscaglia's work.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book insightful and well-researched. They appreciate its explanations of science and psychology behind human behavior. The author's knowledge is extensive, and her writing style infuses the prose with humor. The first chapter provides a captive introduction to the subject with a touch of humor. The book blends hard science with real-life questions and answers.
"...PLUS you get the wit and whimsy of Liz Langley, who tells these stories like she's talking to you on the next barstool and occasionally nudging you..." Read more
"...Love is a crazy thing and this book helps you to slowly get that. Enlightening, cute funny, quirky, and fabulous in the way it speaks to you; I mean..." Read more
"...The first chapter had a captive introduction to the subject with a touch of humor, but from there I lost interest and said no more after having read..." Read more
"...Not only do you get the wit, humor and pop culture references that make Liz Langley's writing so much fun to read, you're also exposed to the..." Read more
Customers find the book entertaining and engaging. They say the science is surprisingly entertaining and memorable. The book is described as a great read that's not clinical or boring, with 245 pages of content without filler.
"...I actually felt my brain EXPANDING as well as being delightfully tickled as I read through the first half of the book, and was rewarded with a great..." Read more
"Funny book. Love is a crazy thing and this book helps you to slowly get that...." Read more
"...However, it is fun in some spots - just don't take it too seriously...." Read more
"...Not only do you get the wit, humor and pop culture references that make Liz Langley's writing so much fun to read, you're also exposed to the..." Read more
Customers enjoy the variety of stories in the book. They find the stories unusual, quirky, and enlightening.
"...studies on why love makes us a bit nutty -- combined with FABULOUS stories of strange and wonderful love stories you WILL be sharing with people for..." Read more
"...Enlightening, cute funny, quirky, and fabulous in the way it speaks to you; I mean me. Like the way my husband makes me feel...." Read more
"...Although the separate stories are interesting, the ideas are not consistent, and are based on other books or ideas...." Read more
"...like a drug, how it can drive us temporarily insane, and includes many interesting stories." Read more
Customers enjoy the book's love stories. They find them funny and engaging. The book helps readers understand love as a crazy and wonderful experience. Some consider it one of the best books on the subject of love since Leo Buscaglia's writings.
"...a bit nutty -- combined with FABULOUS stories of strange and wonderful love stories you WILL be sharing with people for years at social gatherings...." Read more
"Funny book. Love is a crazy thing and this book helps you to slowly get that...." Read more
"...It explains brain chemistry, how love is like a drug, how it can drive us temporarily insane, and includes many interesting stories." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2012This book is a very skillful blend of hard science -- the latest studies on why love makes us a bit nutty -- combined with FABULOUS stories of strange and wonderful love stories you WILL be sharing with people for years at social gatherings. PLUS you get the wit and whimsy of Liz Langley, who tells these stories like she's talking to you on the next barstool and occasionally nudging you in the ribs. And trust me, you want to keep buying her drinks.
What I liked about the book especially was the clear-eyed way Langley boils down the complicated stuff WITHOUT "dumbing" it down. It's an art that only she and Rachel Maddow (and that old guy in the Schoolhouse Rock films!) ever seem to possess anymore, and she pulls it off with great panache. The "educational" portion of the book takes up some of the early chapters (after a frankly HILARIOUS introduction to Liz and her own highs and lows in love that really personalizes things), but then -- with equal grace -- Langley puts herself in the background and tells us some incredible tales of how all this science and brain chemistry plays out in the real world. And occasionally in the surreal world.
Apart from the introduction, and the brief mention I get (yes, I'm quoted in the book, but only briefly and it's not colouring my opinion of the work as a whole, I swear), my favourite part was the second half, which is just UN-PUT-DOWNABLE true tales of romance, sex and hi-jinks that bring the "crazy" to the title. The best part is that because you are armed with an instant four-year degree in psychology thanks to the first half of the book (which makes the science surprisingly entertaining and memorable), you understand the people so prominently featured in the second half SO MUCH BETTER and believe me, your new-found wisdom will also help you see both your own relationships and the crazy relationships of some of the people you know (we ALL have friends in "WTF?" relationships, people!) in a whole new light.
Langley spends a lot of time on brain chemicals and how they can poke the pleasure centres of our brain for good or ill. I actually felt my brain EXPANDING as well as being delightfully tickled as I read through the first half of the book, and was rewarded with a great "documentary" with warmth and heart galore in the second half. If you have EVER wondered "is it me ... or them that's crazy?" in a relationship, you owe it to yourself to get the answer, and it is most definitely in CRAZY LITTLE THING.
In short, I think this is one of the best books on the subject of love since Leo Buscaglia wrote his eponymous treatise on the subject. Only this one has more jokes.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 16, 2016Funny book. Love is a crazy thing and this book helps you to slowly get that. Enlightening, cute funny, quirky, and fabulous in the way it speaks to you; I mean me. Like the way my husband makes me feel. It kind of tells on your feelings, I mean my feelings. The sex drive I thought was the unbridled "lust" in our relationship. This book really explains things. Great read, not clinical or boring.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 23, 2021This is not a whole book. It is a collection of essays about relationships and sex, so be aware.
Although the separate stories are interesting, the ideas are not consistent, and are based on other books or ideas. The theories vary, and the stories are about differing things.
I'm not certain about the ideas, which are more pop culture than scholarship.
Langley also tends to appear cynical and has her own sense of humor. That's a popular style now, but I don't appreciate the way it comes off.
It's a little like newspaper reporters who allow their opinions into the text; or who add needless descriptions of weather, clothing styles and vehicles in an attempt to make the text more "visual," more like video.
Some of the *research* is questionable at best.
However, it is fun in some spots - just don't take it too seriously.
Langley writes that she has had problems accepting the ends of relationships - serious problems, and she tried to address her own difficulties.
Everyone wants to write memoirs at a young age.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 8, 2012After reading the great reviews (all 13 reviews giving the book 5 stars) I was anticipating a book that would not only be informative, but capture my attention by presenting the material in a light hearted manner. The first chapter had a captive introduction to the subject with a touch of humor, but from there I lost interest and said no more after having read 30% of the book. I became overly bored with the book and could/would not continue. I can't recall ever having that experience before on such a highly rated book.
In summary, I made an honest effort, but the book wasn't for me. I don't want to be critical of the other reviewers, but I couldn't even give a 2 star rating and I am not a harsh reviewer.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2011Great read. This book is very substantive and well-researched. Not only do you get the wit, humor and pop culture references that make Liz Langley's writing so much fun to read, you're also exposed to the science and psychology behind why we do what we do. Liz Langley has scoured the globe to speak with the experts, read the latest research and studies, interviewed the victims and perpetrators and boiled it all down into 245 tasty pages with no filler. It's all good!
Not many writers can write a scholarly book like this one (with enough footnotes and scientific references to satisfy the academics), and still make you laugh and feel as though you're reading an entertainment piece. Masterfully done.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2013I recommend this book to anyone suffering from crushes, obsessions, or limerence. It explains brain chemistry, how love is like a drug, how it can drive us temporarily insane, and includes many interesting stories.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 2, 2011Liz's book, Crazy Little Thing, is an incredibly well written book. Liz explores Love; a very complex, emotional topic, and pars it down into scientifically backed components. Her knowledge of the subject is extensive, and her writing style infuses the prose with entertaining insights, personal reflections, and profound introspection that indicates her level of knowledge.
I highly recommend Liz's book to anyone that wants to know why we fall in love with people that are just plain bad for us, and how to recover, and most of all: forgive yourself for the shortfall. After-all, it's not a character defect: it's biology.
