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Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs* by Chuck Klosterman
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Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs: A Low Culture Manifesto

by Chuck Klosterman

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2,753481,075 (3.79)29
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Scribner (2004), Paperback, 272 pages

Member:SJerusalem
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Showing 1-5 of 48 (next | show all)
granted, klosterman gets some shit for being too deliberate, but this was a very fun read ( )
  lanewilkinson | Dec 4, 2009 |
I have lent this to:
-Ben
-Graham R. (who has it now.) ( )
  sealouse | Nov 28, 2009 |
If you take a transcript of every late night, bong-hit driven, pop-culture conversation ever had in every dorm room across this great land, condense them, edit them, then place them lovingly in a book, you would then have a near facsimile of "Sex, Drugs and Cocoa Puffs," by Chuck Klosterman.

Is it interesting? Yes. But just like those dorm conversations, it will fade quickly. All that will remain with you is the illogic of half remembered hypotheses, which only made sense in context. ( )
  georgehawkey | Nov 23, 2009 |
If one is searcing to understand the term "emo" then look no further. Some of his ideas were ones I agreed with (maybe 20% of them?) but for the most part I disagreed with every word. The book is essentialy a 243 page sulking rant in which he goes on and on. Granted, some of it was intersting, some of it was entertaining, some of it was even educational. But none of it was something I couldn't have lived without reading. Defeniatly made me rethink reading books I see Seth Cohen reading on The OC. The most enjoyable part of the book was the set up, although writing a book's table of contents like a CD track listing isn't really that fufilling now that I think about it. Essentialy, it's a good read if you're bored and can't possiably find anything else to read. After all, it's not Life of Pi, so it's got that going for it.
  Aaroncast86 | Nov 13, 2009 |
This person has a lot of wit and I really enjoy the way he writes. The books seems to be a collection of short stories and articles he wrote in the past. I love his musings on the Real World. ( )
  BoomChick | Oct 13, 2009 |
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Epigraph
Sol-ip-sism (sol' ip size' em), n. Philos. The theory that only the self exists or can be proved to exist.

-- The Random House College Dictionary,

Revised Edition
"I remember saying things, but I have no idea what was said. It was generally a friendly conversation.

-- Associated Press Reporter Jack Sullivan,

attempting to recount 3 A.M. exchange

we had at a dinner party and inadvertently

describing the past ten years of my life.
Dedication
First words
There are two ways to look at life. (Introduction)
No woman will every satisfy me.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs: A Low Culture Manifesto

Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0743236017, Paperback)

There's quite a bit of intelligent analysis and thought-provoking insight packed into the pages of Chuck Klosterman's Sex, Drugs, and Cocoa Puffs, which is a little surprising considering how darn stupid most of Klosterman's subject matter actually is. Klosterman, one of the few members of the so-called "Generation X" to proudly embrace that label and the stereotypical image of disaffected slackers that often accompanies it, takes the reader on a witty and highly entertaining tour through portions of pop culture not usually subjected to analysis and presents his thoughts on Saved by the Bell, Billy Joel, amateur porn, MTV's The Real World, and much more. It would be easy in dealing with such subject matter to simply pile on some undergraduate level deconstruction, make a few jokes, and have yourself a clever little book. But Klosterman goes deeper than that, often employing his own life spent as a member of the lowbrow target demographic to measure the cultural impact of his subjects. While the book never quite lives up to the use of the word "manifesto" in the title (it's really more of a survey mixed with elements of memoir), there is much here to entertain and illuminate, particularly passages on the psychoses and motivations of breakfast cereal mascots, the difference between Celtic fans and Laker fans, and The Empire Strikes Back. Sections on a Guns n' Roses tribute band, The Sims, and soccer feel more like magazine pieces included to fill space than part of a cohesive whole. But when you're talking about a book based on a section of cultural history so reliant on a lack of attention span, even the incongruities feel somehow appropriate. --John Moe

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 20:44:47 -0500)

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