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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Not much to read here. This is an excellent collection of truly boring postcards. Good for a coffee table and a great gift for your kitsch aficionados. ( )What can I say? I love books about postcards. The postcards in this book capture a lost civilization as surely as the cave paintings at Lascaux do. This is a great book. (What does it say about me that I've BEEN to several of these locales?) no reviews | add a review
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Wikipedia:Reference desk/Archives/Miscellaneous/2007 November 21 |
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There's not a word of commentary in this book, but that part is up to you. Certain things begin to stand out as you flip through the pages. Like the always blue skies. (Positive thinking!) Or the potentially interesting details that are uniformly obliterated, thanks to those polite middle-distance views and the muddy qualities of cheap lithography. There's a weird tension between the blandly generic ("Fine Food" reads the only visible sign atop a low-slung white building) and the proudly local (according to the postcard caption, this is "The famous Blue Grill on U.S. 40, St. Elmo, Ill."). In its silently subversive way, Boring Postcards proposes that we look more closely at this hallowed form of marketing to see what it tells us about the values and standards of mainstream American culture. --Cathy Curtis
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:11 -0400)
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