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Reviews for Bad Girls Go Everywhere: The Life of Helen Gurley Brown

 Bad Girls Go Everywhere magazine reviews

The average rating for Bad Girls Go Everywhere: The Life of Helen Gurley Brown based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2012-07-26 00:00:00
2009was given a rating of 3 stars Darlene Nichols
I've been poaching a lot of books from The Hairpin's recommendations and this piqued my interest immediately. I suppose it was the title. But the book should really be called What We Talk About When We Talk About Why Helen Gurley Brown Is A Feminist. Cause damn, that is all we talked about. Some chapters read like term papers when what I wanted was the sizzle I used to associate with Cosmo pages. Don't get me wrong -- I appreciated the argument that HGB played a large, often unnoticed or undocumented role, in the second wave of feminism, but there was no need to be beat over the head with it. It is a point of view I had never considered and I am guilty of this brand of feminism myself (ie. i am fully aware that it was my low-cut, short skirted dress -- not my inability to parallel park -- that totally got me my drivers license). But that unwavering insistence to hammer that point home left the book dry and difficult to wade through in parts. And it left much of the real gristle of the story unexamined, like HGB's body issues -- which were clearly connected to her need for control and her relationship with her mother/sister, are correlated to her insistence women use their sexuality to gain leverage in a male dominated world, and led to the use of models with impossible to obtain images on the cover of her magazine who now impact much younger girls than her original target audience. There's a mere mention of the conflict between her personal beliefs and those she sold, particularly about marriage, but I feel as if the why behind that was never analyzed in favor of beating a dead horse.
Review # 2 was written on 2009-10-04 00:00:00
2009was given a rating of 4 stars Gary Kajiwara
I had never heard of Helen Gurley Brown before and as someone who came of age in the 1990s, I had spent very little time thinking about feminism or the role of women in the US other than to occasionally feel grateful that it was never an issue for me. This book inspired me to really examine some of my views of the past and present. The basic question is whether Helen Gurley Brown (author of Sex and the Single Girl and editor-in-chief of Cosmopolitan for 32 years) is truly a feminist or not. She was definitely in favor of women being independent, empowered, fulfilled and she was a strong supporter of the Equal Rights Amendment and woman's right to abortion. One example of where controversy arises is because while the original feminists wanted to redefine the meaning of feminine attractiveness and replace high heels, makeup, dyed hair, mini skirts, etc with more "natural" feminine attributes, Helen Gurley Brown embraced the old definition of beauty and wanted to help women look the "best" they could. I was very torn on how I felt Helen Gurley Brown and I am still a bit on the fence. She had some traits that I found very admirable (her emphasis on empowerment and avoiding thinking like a victim, her pioneering career, her insistence that being feminist didn't have to mean hating men or becoming asexual, her open-mindedness towards differences in race and sexual orientation) and others where I think she is way off (her belief that avoiding motherhood is the best way to liberation, her assertions that women should always be flattered by sexual advances, her liberal attitude towards affairs (except when she was the wife when suddenly they were off-limits), her quest to remain ageless through whatever means necessary - cosmetic surgery, near anorexic behavior, etc). Overall I found her story complex and interesting and I'm glad I read the book. It's a book that I think I will continue to ponder for quite some time.


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