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More copies of this ISBN:Taking Things Seriously: 75 Objects with Unexpected Significanceby Joshua Glenn and Carol Hayes
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:We all have something in our lives that while not obviously valuable, is displayed as though it were a precious and irreplaceable artifact. Inquire about the object's provenance and you'll likely be treated to a lively anecdote about how it came into your host's possession. Keep digging, and you might even crack the code of what the thing really means.
Taking Things Seriously is a wonder cabinet of seventy-five unlikely thingamajigs that have been invested with significance and transformed into totems, talismans, charms, relics, and fetishes: scraps of movie posters scavenged from the streets of New York by Low Life author Luc Sante; the World War I helmet that inoculated social critic Thomas Frank against jingoism; the trash-picked, robot-shaped hairdo machine described by its owner as a chick magnet; the bagel burned by actor Christopher Walken, moonlighting as a short-order cook. The owners of these objects convey their excitement in short, often poignant essays that invite readers to participate in the enjoyable act of interpreting things. You'll never look at the bric-a-brac on your shelves the same way again. Book News Annotation:"Just as we are collectors of things, things are collectors of
meaning." So says Glenn (a Boston-based writer/editor) in introducing
narratives about 75 pictured objects that might even intrigue
Marxists decrying commodity fetishism. The items he and Hayes (a New
York-based graphic designer) have selected as having special
significance for their owners include petrified foods, antique toys,
and relics of obsolete technology.
Annotation ©2008 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Synopsis:'Taking Things Seriously' is a wonder cabinet of seventy-five unlikely thingamajigs that have been invested with significance and transformed into totems, talismans, charms, relics, and fetishes: scraps of movie posters scavenged from the streets of New York by Low Life author Luc Sante; the World War I helmet that inoculated social critic Thomas Frank against jingoism; the trash-picked, robot-shaped hairdo machine described by its owner as a chick magnet; the bagel burned by actor Christopher Walken while moonlighting as a short-order cook. The owners of these objects convey their excitement in short, often poignant essays that invite readers to participate in the enjoyable act of interpreting things. What Our Readers Are SayingAdd a comment for a chance to win!
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