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Thinner Than Thou
 
 

Thinner Than Thou (Mass Market Paperback)

by Kit Reed (Author) "When you're alone in your mind you may think you're special, but you're only ever another dumb person driving around inside that stupid body ..." (more)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

Reed (@expectations) rips into the dangerous pursuit of body perfection at the expense of the soul in this stinging and mordantly witty satire. In the too-near future (watch out, Dr. Phil!), the Reverend Earl, a godlike "guru of the good life," broadcasts from his Glass Cathedral, promoting the nirvana of the "Afterfat," which can only be achieved by following his bible's formula of relentless exercise, cosmetic interventions and use of his special dietary supplement. A cast of delicious characters, caught like insects in day-glo amber, features bewildered twin teens Betz and Danny Abercrombie. The brothers are searching for their anorexic sister Annie, who's been shipped off to a convent created by Earl for sinners with eating disorders and run by the very scary Dedicated Sisters. Their confused but well-meaning mom turns for help to an eccentric underground railroad of religious clerics of various denominations who would love to see Earl destroyed before he launches his next program, Solutions. In the rousing endgame, aging stockbroker Jeremy Devlin enters Earl's high-ticket desert spa to lose weight and discovers the dark heart at the core of Earl's empire. With this sharp-eyed look at America's obsession with image, Reed provides much food for thought and reaffirms her position as one of our brightest cultural commentators.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Booklist

*Starred Review* Imagine a not-so-distant future in which idolatry of everything youthful, perfect, and beautiful has become the only religion, and natural aging, with its spare-tire midriffs, cheesy thighs, and wrinkly faces, is a punishable sin. Such is the perfect setting for the megalomaniacal Reverend Earl to thrive and prosper. From coast to coast, Reverend Earl's luxury spa, Sylphania, is all the rage, and to it the overweight flock for personally supervised weight-loss programs and plenty of preaching on the heavenly state of the Afterfat. For troubled teens suffering with anorexia, bulimia, and overweight, there are the reverend's "convents," in which the "proper" ways to eat and think are taught, and to one of these her parents consign anorexic Annie. When her siblings discover she's gone, and the folks won't talk, they sense big trouble. They set off with Annie's boyfriend to find her and bring her home. Unlikely people, in particular an underground network of religions that recalls a time when gods, not flesh, were worshipped, help them. Reed's visionary tale is brilliant, though at times painful to read. Still, the main characters all come to realize their strengths, who they are, and what is really important. Paula Luedtke
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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When you're alone in your mind you may think you're special, but you're only ever another dumb person driving around inside that stupid body. Read the first page
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4 Reviews
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4.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars An effective subject matter that ultimately loses its grip., Jun 18 2005
By Craig R. Estrella "surecure" (Toronto, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Thinner Than Thou (Paperback)
Thinner Than Thou is one of those books you want to appreciate for so many reasons. The subject matter is a very enticing part of what gave the book such potential: a future where the body and outer beauty has become the religion of society, and those not conforming are subject to inquisition. This is what sold me on buying and reading the book, and it follows through on being very effective for much of the book.

However, the story and its philosophy fall apart in the last third. Coincidences bring together all the main characters -- who had been all over the USA -- at the same time in an underexplained and thus wholly unbelievable manner. The ability of the main characters to go on the offensive in the end is so loose that the reader would have to have a great leap of faith to accept it in any way. The introduction of "Solutions" -- a thinly veiled Final Solution of sorts that appears out of nowhere as if written as an afterthought -- is also so undeveloped and obvious that it is entirely ineffective.

The subject matter also turns away from discussing what is wrong with society in regards to the demands on people to be a certain way and becomes a silly "conspiracy of the thin" that wallows in the idea that demands on the obese not to be gluttonous are nothing more than some kind of power-trip by the thin.

The ending is without a doubt the biggest let-down and worst written endings I have ever read. Like a film with no third act, the book takes an easy way out that gives it the feel of one of those after-school specials on TV designed for teenagers. One can simply understand how badly written it is by reading the last sentence of the novel. Had the book not fallen apart in the end, I would have easily recommended it. But, with its cheap conclusion and the defeatist, conspiratorial mindset it adopts in the end, I find no reason to recommend it to anybody who has more than just a curiousity in the book.

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5.0 out of 5 stars A Worst-Dressed List of Our Collective Unconscious, Jul 11 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Thinner Than Thou (Hardcover)
What is perhaps most disturbing about Reed's cautionary tale of the pursuit of phyisical perfect gone awry is not the horrific ends to which her characters go to appease the insatiable god that stares back at them from the mirror every morning, but rather, that no matter how outrageous the plot becomes, no matter how wild her characters' acts of good or evil may appear, we never have to work too hard to believe what's going on.

By turns dramatic, hilarious, ghastly and gripping, a kind of suburban magical realism runs through Reed's pages like blood, infusing the story with both the intimate and the fantastic while she slices into our egos like a knife so sharp you don't know you've been cut till you hit the floor.

One of those rare books that will surprise both an author's veteran fans and those just discovering her, Thinner Than Thou is a must-have with an epilogue written on the happy meal boxes and weight-loss pill bottles of an entire nation.

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5.0 out of 5 stars The Truth Hurts, Jun 23 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Thinner Than Thou (Hardcover)
THINNER THAN THOU may depict a futuristic dystopia, but a great deal of it is uncomfortably close to home as it takes America's obsession with weight and beauty and stretches it only a little to give us a portrait of the horrible place at the end of the highway down which we are now speeding.

With the evolution of such plastic surgery shows as THE SWAN, surgery and liposuction are being touted as acceptable, if not expected processes in every day life. Weight has been an issue in the media since at least the Sixties and with Hollywood stars now starving themselves to create an even thinner ideal, the idea of a normal body has become skewed to the grotesque.

Thinner Than Thou celebrates those who have been forced into these ideals and the torture required to obtain them and, despite crippling disabilities (anorexia, morbid obesity), these heroes have the strength and the will to fight back. Every aspect of America's obsession with food, from self-starvation to eating contests to the everyday torture of talking ourselves out of that extra cookie is explored and celebrated, for this bleak view of the future is taken with a grain of salt and, more importantly, a fabulous sense of humor.

Ms. Reed has long been a spokeswoman for the American Woman, but she may just have been promoted to being the spokeswoman for the American consciousness. A great book.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Are we already living this dystopian future?
Failing to conform to the "ideal" body shape already FEELS like a crime in America, so it's easy to imagine a time when it will actually be a crime. Read more
Published on Jun 7 2004 by wilpaudon

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