Synopses & Reviews
When old standbys like "Hey, baby, come here often?" and "What's your sign?" fail to set a would-be pick-up's heart aflutter, why not try a few choice words from the guy who practically invented Linguistic seduction? After all, could anyone resist a request like "Spend that kiss which is my heaven to have?" (Anthony and Cleopatra)? Whose better judgment wouldn't melt when confronted with "We shall be as twinned lambs that frisk in the sun, and bleat the one at the other" (The Winter's Tale)?
Wayne Hill and Cynthia Ottchen have organized these and hundreds of other quotations from Shakespeare into 10 seduction strategies, including Ice Breakers, Basic Chatups, Whining and Wheedling, and Shakespeare's Silver Tongue. Shakespeare and the Art of Seduction is delightfully fun to, read, whether or not one puts its wares into practice.
Synopsis
Do you long to be seductive? Have a desire to be seduced? Then “let lips do what hands do” and put into practice the most enticing baubles of seduction ever written.
Shakespeare and the Art of Verbal Seduction contains the Bards best seducing lines to cajole, charm, and even proposition the object of your desire.
Shakespeare is the master of persuasion. He induces the hardest of hearts to give up mind, body, and soul with a brilliant flash of words. Here theyre collected for you, his little miracles of language, arranged in ten strategies for every stage of a love affair, from first encounter to the full throes of passion. Never again let your desire flounder in bad come-ons. Learn the art of seduction from the greatest seducer of all time, and get what you want.