Colette Books


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Colette Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Colette
What Lacan Said About Women: A Psychoanalytic Study (Contemporary Theory Series)
Published in Paperback by Other Press (2006-02-14)
Author: Colette Soler
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Average review score:

Femininity Figured Out
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-14
I found this book very useful and stimulating--beautifully writen and very well translated. It condenses all of Lacan's remarks on femininity and illustrates the concepts with clarity showing a pedagogical gift that does not sacrifice in rigor. She sheds light on statements like The Woman does not exist and gives new meaning to the Freudian idea of feminine masochism. She is brilliant when she suggests an ethic of sexual difference. She deftly moves from the psychic realm to the social context and offers an original contribution to current debates on sex and gender. Do not miss this excellent book by one of the most distinguished thinkers in the Lacanian field today who regales us with a book that is both accesible and sophisticated.

Do not Waste Your Time or Money
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-15
This review won't convince the converted, but for others, a word of warning. The Other Press is making a career of slapping together bits and pieces of blather from noted Lacanians, no matter how bad, and putting a nice cover on it. This book is no different. Even if you agree with Soler's points of view, the basic fact is that this is a shoddy book. Patched together from lectures and talks here and there, a lot of it is familiar, it is slapped haphazardly together, and there is no unity or cohesion to the book. There are essays by Soler in better collections.

In terms of the content, well, if you aren't enamoured of declarative sentences that say nothing, you'll hate it. Soler is the master of the bland, empty statement masquerading as brilliance. I think the emporer has no clothes.

Her insights about Lacan and women? A combination of allusions, a lot of opinions, constant references to "the clinic" that are never followed through, very quick glosses on some diagrams, and a lot of quoting of some of Lacan and Freud's ideas that add absolutely nothing to the field. You may find something of interest here; I think there is no substance. You are much better off reading what Lacan said about women yourself.

Another poor offering from the Other Press.

Colette
Deborah
Published in Hardcover by William Heinemann (1973-02-12)
Author: Colette Davenat
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Average review score:

Adventures of an Elizabethan spy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-03
This is in the same general genre as Juliette Benzoni's Catherine and Marianne books, or Sergeanne Golon's Angelique: lavishly detailed romantic adventure stories centering around a woman. Deborah is an intelligent and beautiful young woman, carefully trained for a career as an agent of Elizabeth I of England.

I found it rather mediocre. It was an entertaining enough read, but rather sloppily written, translated or edited. The heroine's hair is all shades of blonde and red, and it doesn't appear to be that she's dyeing it as a disguise. Deborah never really came alive to me.

Not bad for whiling away a little time, but I wasn't interested enough to continue.

Colette
La maison de Claudine
Published in Paperback by BiblioBazaar (2007-06-22)
Author: Sidonie-Gabrielle Colette
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first Colette
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-12
in this book Colette talks us about her childhood and her encounters with nature, the relationship with her mother and first amourous experiences. I think that it is not the best book from colette, I would recommend La Vagabonde

Colette
The One Thing Needful: A Book of Meditations for the Busy Orthodox Woman
Published in Paperback by Light & Life Pub Co (1996-11)
Author: Colette D. Jonopulos
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Average review score:

A Good Idea for a Collection of Religious Essays
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-09

THE ONE THING NEEDFUL contains sixty-nine short, contemporary essays revolving -- sometimes very loosely -- around a Biblical verse and ending with either a question or thought for the reader to ponder. Most of the "meditations" are under a page and a half in length, which is ideal for those too busy to read more than a few pages in a single sitting. There is a table of contents in the front, and the titles clearly indicate the topic of each essay. The mediatations can also be read out of sequence depending upon the interests of the reader.

As it is explained in the preface, the idea behind this book is excellent; however, it does not play out as well in practice. The author mentions several times that she is a convert to Orthodoxy, and her overall tone and approach are more Protestant than Orthodox even when discussing the three Orthodox pillars of fasting, alms giving, and prayer. The author also tends to expound on her own personal experiences rather than exploring the messages in the scripture quoted at the beginning of each section. Then there is the added disappointment that despite the subtitle MEDITATIONS FOR BUSY ORTHODOX WOMEN, very few of the essays are geared specifically towards women, which was one of the most appealing aspects of this book.

For those individuals who wish to read literature focused on Orthodox spirituality but are pressed for time, I recommend LITTLE RUSSIAN PHILOKALIA, VOL. 1: ST. SERAPHIM OF SAROV translated by Fr. Seraphim Rose, PRAYERS BY THE LAKE by St. Nikolai Velimirovich, and THE SPIRITUAL LIFE AND HOW TO BE ATTUNED TO IT by St. Theophan the Recluse. These books are all composed of fairly short chapters or, in the case of PRAYERS BY THE LAKE, short meditative prayers. They embody the spirit of Orthodoxy and impart rich meaning upon the reader even in a few short pages.

Colette
Unstable Environment
Published in Perfect Paperback by Parker Publishing Llc (2008-04-17)
Author: Marcia Colette
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Average review score:

Underdeveloped
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-18
APOOO: 2.5

As Unstable Environment begins, we meet Sinclair Duval, a commercial airline pilot. She is at a local indoor play facility for children with her three year old niece, Nahla. The two are pretending to be mother and daughter for the patrons at Jungle Kingdom. This is a tactic they developed, so no one would ask any questions about Nahla's alcoholic, drug addict mother, Mina. Sinclair expects a regular play date with Nahla; instead, a freak accident leaves both aunt and niece in the hospital with life threatening injuries. In an attempt to save young Nahla's life, their rescuer, Rio Velasquez, decides to break all the rules of his were-cheetah coalition. Rio knows what he is doing is wrong but he is prepared to suffer the consequences. Once young Nahla is introduced to the world of were-cheetahs, things change for the toddler and her aunt forever.

Even though Unstable Environment by Marcia Colette was reviewed by me in advance reader copy form, this book was particularly hard for me to get through as a reviewer. This story had great promise, the idea behind it seemed unique and not taken by many other authors but the delivery was lacking. Unstable Environment seemed underdeveloped. When the story first started, it kept my interest. As the story went on, it started to lose momentum. This was especially evident when Rio asks Sinclair about a kiss they had shared. When I looked back in the book to try and find that scene, I could not because it was missing. There were a couple other times when scenes were missing from the book but were mentioned as if they were there.

The biggest issue I had with this book was the character Rio's voice. The way that Rio expressed his growing connection towards Nahla was creepy. From the character mentioning how juicy a baby's lips looked to mentioning how soft her skin was. I tried to read these words all kinds of different ways to not find them creepy or strange but I could not. Again, the idea behind this book seemed strong and it could have worked but more needed to go into this story. Unstable Environment would be more recommendable if a few key points would be tweaked inside the book. Read this book at your own discretion.

Reviewed by Chantay,
APOOO BookClub

Colette
Micah (Anita Blake Vampire Hunter)
Published in MP3 CD by Brilliance Audio on MP3-CD Lib Ed (2006-02-28)
Author: Laurell K. Hamilton
List price: $39.25
New price: $29.25

Average review score:

Micah and his huge _____
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-16
This short book was very disappointing. The plot was shallow. The climactic action was boring, compared to other books in the series.

Additionally, I felt that this book was little more than thinly disguised porn. I read waay too much about Micah's member and bedroom skill.


Micah, by L. Hamilton
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-10
Micah (Anita Blake, Vampire Hunter: Book 13) (Paperback)
by Laurell K. Hamilton (Author) "It was half past dawn when the phone rang..." (more)
Key Phrases: vampire executioner, protective circle, Marshal Blake


This book was a bit disappointing compared to her others. Very short. Almost like someone else wrote it from her notes.

Readable
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-02
Have read all her books, and liked this one for the story line, have not missed a book

Disappointing.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-25
I'm a fan of LKH's Anita Blake series up to Obsidian Butterfly. I had heard a lot of good things about the Anita Blake books, so I took advantage of Amazon's 4-for-3 promotion and got up to Micah of Anita Blake books, among a few other paranormals. First, let me address the quality of the book. It is essentially a short story, printed in large font and double-spaced, with blank pages between chapters to fluff it out. Compared to the rest of the Anita Blake books, it's obvious this one was puffed up when it should have been in an anthology or sold as a novella at a fraction of the price.

As for the story, there was a noticeable downhill trend from Narcissus in Chains, and Incubus Dreams was pretty bad. Micah climbs out of the hole a little bit, in that Anita actually animates a corpse in this one.

Her co-worker Larry runs into a family problem, and he can't make a business trip, so Anita goes in his stead, taking Micah with her to feed the ardeur. The sex scene can be avoided without losing the plot, but that isn't even the annoying part of Micah. Anita continues to be more and more irritable. I found myself shaking my head at the things that made her angry, and I have become less sympathetic to Anita gradually since NiC, since she seems to have abandoned her beliefs. I get the impression that LKH wants to show readers that female heroines can do everything male heroes can: have an acceptable short fuse, be sociopathic, sleep around (and have orgies), kill people, etc. While I can see that this might be the goal, it is the quantity and quality of these things that doesn't appeal to me. I wouldn't accept this from any of the leading males in the books I read, and equally, I can't accept this from a leading female, even if it is the formerly-beloved Anita Blake. She went from being fiesty to being angry, from walking the line between heroism and sociopathy to plain sociopath, from prude to bed jumper, from contemplative to unapologetic about killing. She hasn't "grown" as a character but changed, becoming an unrecognizable character when comparing to the early novels.

In Micah, she does fight for her reputation, stands up for herself, and exhibits some of the behaviors of the old Anita, but the huge excerpt of Danse Macabre made me realize I had raised my hopes for nothing.

The excerpt basically told me I didn't want to continue this series. Ronnie and every other woman is jealous of Anita, and it seems as though the narrator wants us to hate Ronnie more and more. Anita has dibs on most of the males in the book and most of them want to jump her bones. Anita is beautiful and all-powerful. No woman can be single, strong, and likeable in Anitaverse because only Anita can embody those qualities. I'm tired of LKH's Mary Sue ways, and unless she has some amazing explanation for Anita's complete character metamorphosis since NiC (and if she does, I will gladly buy her novels again) and returns Anita to her former self, I'll be reading other books.

Books I've liked that are mostly paranormal thriller/adventure with some romance: Dead Witch Walking (Rachel Morgan, Book 1), Dead Until Dark (Sookie Stackhouse), The Blood Books, Vol. 1 (Blood Price / Blood Trail), Moon Called (Mercy Thompson Series, Book 1), and The Turning (Blood Ties, Book 1). I've also heard good things about the Kitty Norville, Dante Valentine, and Anna Strong books, which are on my reading list. Good paranormal romance series include Dark Lover: A Novel of the Black Dagger Brotherhood (The Black Dagger Brotherhood) and Fantasy Lover (Dark-Hunter, Book 1).

Very Disappointed In this Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-14
I was very surprised to find that the book was really a novella made to look like a novel. The publisher used obvious "fill tactics" such as 1) the entire 1st chapter was in the previous book, 2) blank pages to add volume, 3) large print and double spaced lines. The plot was thin and was resolved most unsatisfactorily. Just when you wonder how the main character could possibly make it out of the situation alive - she passes out, wakes up in a hospital in good health with a new power.

Up until this book, I was a big fan. This is the 13th book in the series. There is an expectation for a certain level of quality and consistency. Now, I feel like I was completley taken advantage of. Both the publisher and the author should be ashamed at this blatant attempt to make a quick buck at the expense of the fan. I will think twice before buying another book from this publisher and possibly this author.

Colette
Transsexualism: Illusion and Reality (Disseminations: Psychoanalysis in Contexts)
Published in Library Binding by Wesleyan (2003-08-01)
Author: Colette Chiland
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Average review score:

Transsexualism
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-28
The author is the psychiatrist-in-chief of the Alfred Binet center in France and has treated many transsexual clients. On the back of the cover her book promisses "Transsexualisms first defining study". This would require a good literature review, new research data, case studies or new interpretations of older data. Instead the reader finds slapstick images, generalising one-liners and moral bravado.

According to the author, psychotherapy is able to turn TSs around, and the author believes her clients sickness responsible for her lack of succes. The transsexuals she saw, without exeption, flee her psychoanalytical treatment. They falsely resolve the psychological conflict at the root of their gender problem throug surgery. Thus they remain sick as before and sadly "mutilatated" after. All of her clients, without exeption, suffer from amnesia in regard to the conflicts in their clildhood, are borderline psychotic, in denial of their homosexuality as well as their birth sex, and have a stereotypical barby doll image of the men or women they become. When they do not fully pass in their chosen sex they are "pathetic". They suffer the delusion that their post-operative genitalia entitle them to man- or womanhood. In many asides the author assures her readers she is a caring analyst, a feminist and a philosopher. The author uses philosopher Paul Ricoeur, one I esteem deeply, to validate her opinion that TSs should opt for a life in their birth sex. Ricoeur, in my understanding, is concerned with the limitations of human experience in general. Applying it to gender dysphoria may be considered a leap out of context.

On the back of the cover, this book ensures a full review of the literatur on TS, but it is honest to say the author leaves out many studies not useful to clarify her broad vision.

The author has been working extensively with transsexual clients in a French clinic specialized in their care. I am surprised that a therapist so talented was elected to treat these clients. They do not open up about their doubts and ambivalancies. The aim of any therapeutic enterprise (to find an individual approach and treatment plan) was never fulfilled. This must be very sad to both author and clients.

I must noe that it is possible that this author's client population and treatment setting may be very different from the clients I see. Many of these have chosen for a partial medical treatment, and some for no medical treatment at all. How to reconcile this with Cliland's findings? It may be that the author has a less divers clientele in her office. If her book reflects a very negative psychoanalytical stance towards the medical treatment of gender dysphoria in the French medical community, might it be that only the most desperate cases may make it to the obligatory visits to the authors office? A client-population so traumatised by their gender conflict, they suffer from all it's secondary terrors as well? Like borderline and personality disorders? This is, of course highly speculative.

Clinical practice in other countries is less negative, resulting in generaaly good mental health among the transgender population I see. They show a precise and painful memory, not of the certainty of being a member of the other sex, but of doubt, uncertainty and desire. All those fragile human feelings they hoped to grow out of but did not, in spite of their best efford. At some time this feld reality came in conflict with the lives they wanted for themselves. The story is not one of denial of a biologic reality, it is one of admittance to one not coveted by psychoanalysis. This falls outside it's grasp. My clients are not borderline, not combattative, and share willingly their doubts, worry, sadness and mourning. They come to various medical and non-medical solutions. How can I as a responsibly acting clinician reconcile this with this author's noions?

It might help, and this is only a suggestion, if this psychiatrist-in-chief stops hearing Freud's and Lacan's voices, and started listening to her clients. She might hear something. have I done my clients right? Have I ben the best people-helper I can be? Have I listened? Who was I preocupied with? My clients?

Arianne van der Ven

This is a MUST READ!!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-12
This review was initially posted for another book by Chiland, but is of equal applicatiobn to this book.

So-called TS activists have started a campaign against this book as they did with J.Michael Bailey. Anyone interested in transexuality should read both vews as nothing is proven. The hostility that many TS direct at alternative views is confrimation of a mental disorder point of view.

Chiland advances the mental disorder view in both of her books on the topic (that is, both that have been translated into English). For those who are not transexual, reading either must be tempered with the understanding that other views are more popular and perhaps more accepted; for transsexuals reading either, understanding that nothing is proven and that present treatmeent is based strongly upon the model Chiland presents is necessay.

This is a truly fantastic book. From the viewpoint of transsexual activists, perhaps the most politically incorrect book on the subject, but from any other view the most insightful and "tell-it-like-it-is" view of transexuality available today, perhaps ever. It does not pander to the subject, but treats it in the cold light of reality. As a transexual woman who can deal with reality, I am overjoyed that a book finally exists that dispells the mythology concerning the subject. Chiland easily deals with the most prevalent of TS statements ("I am a woman") and treats them with respect, but also with the logic that most ignore. She points to the finacial aspect of SRS as a motivation for some doctors and the need to face the question of SRS directly. Her book is unique, for it does not avoid the basic questions posed by transsexuality but rather addresses each in turn, with a logic that will force all but the zealots to think. Caregivers need to read this; transsexual patients need to read this. This book says what it real, not what is myth. Transsexuals who believe in the mythology will be irrate for it does not offer blind support(although it certainly offers compassion) and questions some of their most basic and firmly held beliefs, It questions what has become a standard medical answer in North America and elsewhere. The transsexual "lobby" has become active in the past years, attacking without mercy those who differ with their mythology. J. Michael Bailey of Northwestern University has been a favoured target. As this book becomes known, it shall be attacked by those who wish us all to follow the demanded cant of "I am woman","I am man". Some may regard it as an attack akin to Janice Raymonds "Transexual Empire" of long ago. It is far from that. While Chiland questions the very foundation of transsexulity and Moneys seperation of "sex" and "gender", there is none of the questionable scholarship and feminist rhetoric to be found in these pages. This book is firmly based in experience and logic. I suspect that many American readers will react much as they did when France opposed the War in Iraq, with emotional zeal and blind adherance to their view. That is a shame, for Chiland deserves and very careful consideration by all who are or deal with transexual patients. She raises questions that demand answers not blind following of a possibly misguided solution. The truth hurts. For some, this book will hurt greatly. For those who pause and reflect rationally, it will raise issues long put to the back of the mind, uncomfortable issues that many elect to ignore. Issues that have been ignored for far too long... A major step in our understanding of this difficult subject.

Garbage
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-15
Chiland's book is without a doubt one of the most offensive pieces of transphobic propaganda I've read which has been published within the past few decades. At the superficial level, the language she uses to describe trans people- "disturbing people," "deluded," "mutilated," "narcissistic," "caricatures," "often... ugly bab[ies]... horrible brats who would never elicit the comment: `What a gorgeous little girl you have there!'" (as a "cause" of being a transman), and so on- is not only officious (and false) but revealing of a deeper loathing and culturally-inspired disgust felt toward and misunderstanding of trans people. She does little more than regurgitate and misrepresent all the tripe presented by feminist separatist (like the ones running the Michigan Womyn's Festival a few years ago; the people who claim that trans people are just male stereotypes of real women and men. These people shouldn't, of course, be confused with the majority of feminists, who are mostly accepting or at the very least tolerant of trans people), by work, which she references, on the subject by conservative psychologists that is decades old (one of whom quotes Deuteronomy 22:5 as an epigraph, another who documents the "curing" of a transwoman through having her exorcized(!), which Chiland thinks is worth noting as a valid "cure"), by applications of Freud to the subject, by the standardized checklists resulting from the work of people like Harry Benjamin, and by early studies on "feminine boys" and "post-operative suicide" (which even she has to admit doesn't happen at such a high rate as she most likely expected, although she still manages to display the data in a disingenuous fashion) and wraps them all up in (partially) meaningless little anecdotes. The only thing she manages to reveal with her anecdotes is that she is a sadist to whom trans people should never, ever be referred (she offers a vignette in which she coldly feeds several young transmen exaggerated negative aspects changing sex until she forces them to tears, running them off and infuriating their parents); although, to be fair, she does grudgingly admit that "[f]rustrating as it is for the reader and myself, the prime consideration must be professional secrecy" just to let the reader know that she isn't willing to toss *all* of her "professional" ethics out the window in her attack on trans people.
Beyond the problems stated above, there are several disturbing themes in here piece of work. The first is, of course, her main argument, that trans people shouldn't ever be given the hormones and surgeries which make them appear less like the "caricatures" the author labels them and should instead be "cured" through psychotherapy, in the same fashion that shrinks were trying to "cure" gays and lesbians (if they even recognized the existence of the latter) up until a little after the middle of last century. This argument is pure garbage and can only be presented as valid through anecdotes in which the trans person was traumatized into suppressing their identity by a so-called professional or another agent- very much like the "treatment" of homosexuality. The second is the argument that "transsexualism" as it exists in the "West" today is purely a creation of the media(!) and the misuse of medical technology. She backs this argument, which is pure bunk, up by appealing to the notion of a "third gender" (which is a nice thought in terms of social acceptance, but should not be used to categorized most, much less all, trans people) a niche for the gender-changers, with comparison to other cultures: the hijras, the "berdaches," the "liminals" of Polynesia (in this section she gets away with saying that "homosexuality is `optional,'" even if it is in reference to a group which she can comfortably Other), the third gender of the inuits. She neglects, however, to take into consideration the fact that most hijras are castrated, that many in all of the examples given will use female or male hormones when given the opportunity, and appears to forget entirely that there is an eastern part of Asia in which many, many trans people receive hormones and surgery, or that there exist any Americans south of the US, who use hormones, silicone injections, surgery, and other methods to look more like men or women; all of these things she ignores when talking about how the penis and testicles are "the most precious parts of [the male] body" and how their removal is, she implies, a sin against humanity, or when she mocks transmen who want to have their breasts removed (although she, ironically enough, later openly taunts a transman who hasn't had an ovariectomy or a hysterectomy). Another theme is the tired, dead one that transwomen and transmen- but particularly transwomen- are just playing out stereotypes that feminism has so long fought against. A really dangerous idea which she espouses is one which is, unfortunately, all to dominant in the field of psychotherapy: that of professionalism, a positivistic approach to psychology as a Science (big S) which disregards the opinions, thoughts, or ideas of anyone not trained in that specific field (as most trans people are not) as invalid or irrelevant. She doesn't care what trans people think or say, all that is relevant is what she interprets and opines, or what other "professionals" (transgender sex workers, McD's workers, factory workers, they don't know what the hell they're talking about! They surely haven't the knowledge of "gender identity disorder" which she has!) interpret so long as they are psychologists (no sociologists or modern academic feminists or biologists or economists or computer/technology scientists here!) and agree with her. The Benjamin Standards of Care, the DSM-IV, and those transphobic "professionals" of decades ago tell her all she needs to know.
Because she takes a Freudian approach, her conclusion is merely a regurgitation of his theories and philosophy applied to trans people, claiming that all "transsexuality" stems from a disorder caused by childhood trauma that is (she appears to be influenced here by the right-wing pundits of the US) shaped by the (evil liberal) media into a craving for the escape from one's self into "The Other" sex. Her solution is to more strongly reinforce gender roles in children. There is no way that any trans person could read this and not be offended, and I would hope that there is no way that any shrink, or any other "professional," for that matter, could read this and take it seriously. This isn't psychology, this is a proselytizing philosophy that doesn't bother to take into account realities.

Misguided
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-22
Colette Chiland admits she's a psychiatrist of the 'old school' in Europe. Which means her background is not medical, but in the humanities. In fact, her book is nothing but a philosophical/ethical analysis of transsexualism viewed as a problem stemming from social mores.

Which is not the case, since a true understanding of 'gender dysphoria' requires a medical background.

Books on the ethics of SRS and such were fairly common during the 70s. Several of those are revisited, and the sources cited by Dr. Chiland are all for the most part 30 years old or more. Her research is outdated because she does not want to take into account the more current, medical view of 'gender dysphoria' as something that has a biological basis.

Some of the generalizations are almost laughable. For example, she talks about 'gender dysphoric boys' who draw two women: one like a good fairy, the other like an evil witch. According to her, one of the root causes of transsexualism in genetic males is such splitting of the mother image. Wanting to disappear the witch, they want to become the fairy.

And that is not even the most farfetched bit.

Even so, the book may have some value as a different view on the social implications of transition and such. I'd say it's an interesting read for anyone with a background in the humanities. Anyone familiar with the idea of a male phallocentric narrative as the core of modern social order will see whence the author is coming.

Still, Dr. Chiland seems to come to the subject with an axe to grind, and although at times interesting, in the end the book is irrelevant to those to whom it is addressed: experts in the field and the transsexual men and women out there.

PS: This book's cultural context is France or, more widely, continental Europe. Some of the references and names cited will be rather obscure to the American reader, and the ideas proposed by such names, unknown. Dr. Chiland has stretched the area covered by post-structuralist theory to what is now more properly treated by medicine, although in the end she clings to a dated essentialism where men are born men and will die men, and women are born to have children. Love and marriage are, for her, means to an end (having children); and transsexualism is a narcissistic disorder because it goes against such end.

Colette
Cajun and Creole Food Practices, Customs, and Holidays (Ethnic and Regional Food Practices--a Series)
Published in Paperback by American Dietetic Association (1996-10)
Author: Colette Guidry Leistner
List price: $12.00

Average review score:

Not that great...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-18
This book has very few recipes. It is a paper pamphlet, of the type put out by county extension organizations and definitely NOT worth the money(it's from the American Diabetes Association--you could probably get it for a much lower cost, if not for free, from them) However, it does give some interesting historical background of Cajun and Creole culture, as well as a pretty good definition of the differences between the two.

Colette
Colette
Published in Hardcover by Peter Owen Ltd (1973-01)
Author: Margaret Crosland
List price:
Used price: $1.88

Average review score:

Call me Colette.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-02-27
Searching the bookshelves alone in a foreign country, this book was the only possibility. Colette comes across as a very astute business woman, albiet a pretty scary looking one. I never read any of her books which are explained as being soft-porn. She wrote in the early part of the 20th century and gained fame and fortune using a single name only, the Cher of her time. She was the rave of France. I am not sure why. Probably France was not a very intersting place at that time either. Her final book was "Gigi". I don't want to read any of her voluminous works. Her mother had a very interesting face. That's about the best of this biography. Perhaps there are other authors who make her out to be a more interesting person.

Colette
Colette's Japanese Cuisine
Published in Hardcover by Kodansha America (1988-11)
Author: Colette Rossant
List price: $16.95
New price: $7.45
Used price: $0.38
Collectible price: $16.95

Average review score:

NOT Japanese Cuisine
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-08
I was very excited to receive this book as a gift, being I recently made friends with two Japanese families near where I live.

Unfortunately, not having heard of Colette Rossant, I did not realize that this is HER version of Japanese food, not a book of Japanese recipes.

I was hoping that she would explain Japanese food to American readers so we could understand their food easier.

Instead, I found a book utilizing Japanese ingredients in a French manner.

Maybe this will be of interest to some of you, but I found the title of the book to be misleading, as I was looking for a Japanese cookbook.


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