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TM
Astrologically Incorrect
By Terry Marlowe
Reviewed by Madelyn Miller
Those
who like their candy on the tart side will find Terry Marlowe's
"Astrologically Incorrect" a tasty treat. This entertaining handbook reviews
the conventional astrological signs and the people born under them,
catalogued according to their customary qualities--but with an added
acid twist: demonstrating step by step how to make use of people's
personalities, their quirks and neurotic wrinkles, to gain advantage over
them at work and in private life. The author's goal, as she makes abundantly
clear, is to coach readers to manipulate lovers and bosses, friends and
foes, through understanding the features of their "victim's" sign and
resultant personality--"The artful strategist dissects her subject's
personality to expose his vulnerable spots."
This is not self-help for the sentimental, nor is it a
guide for the lovelorn, the depressed, or those yearning for genuine trust
and intimacy. This is a fun to read guide for clever cynics exasperated by
the chronic obliviousness of those around them and determined to gain the
upper hand through hypocrisy, deviousness, and Machiavellian wit. As such,
Marlowe's advice sheds a withering glance at the potential for genuine
communication--it's a book for people who have already tried their level
best to be sensible and direct, and given up this approach in despair. This
is the art of the con. There is not a warm-and-fuzzy suggestion in all its
216 pages.
Despite this detached and wicked perspective, or
perhaps because of it, "Astrologically Incorrect" is often very funny. Viz:
Under "Pisces Turn-Ons the reader finds:
Remember, sympathy is the Pisces Achilles'
heel. Pisces especially sympathizes with tragedy. If a tragic history is
past praying for, borrow one. (For ideas, read Thomas Hardy or the whole of
Russian literature).
Or, later:
Pisces gets kicks hiding anywhere, even in a
category.
"Astrologically Incorrect" is a listing not only of
Zodiac signs and well-worn adjectives, but nuanced portraits of hypothetical
individuals so palpably real that you'd swear that Marlowe has had personal
experiences with your ex, your college roommate, and your first boss. Even
readers who take astrology itself with a grain of salt will be impressed
with Marlowe’s shrewd observations of human nature. Her profiles of varied
character types will ring familiar bells for anyone with people-watching
instincts, and her weary insight that human beings rarely change their
fundamental habits of mind and temperament – much as they earnestly may wish
to do so, or promise to do so – is very on-target. It suggests wisely that
we must take people for who they are and tailor our approach to them
accordingly. Perhaps this is not a very hopeful book (nor a very politically
correct one), but it is a very amusing book, sure to pull guffaws from
readers born under the most unsmiling of stars.
To order the book log on to
http://www.terrymarlowe.com,
Amazon, or visit your local Barnes and Noble or Border's Books
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