Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Exquisite Voyeurism: An eloquent glance into a common night, 28 May 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Saturday Night (Hardcover)
Susan Orlean invites us into the brief lives of numerous citizens who are experiencing their typical Saturday nights. One will learn about the history of the weekend, experience rituals and enjoy the company of many interesting individuals. She writes with a comfortable energy and the reader will certainly contemplate the weekend with a new reverence. Visit cruisers, diners, dieters and polka dancers. Understand their fascinations, their lonliness, their time to relax, their time to look forward to bestial pursuits. I really enjyed this book and her style is accessible and refreshing.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Exquisite Voyeurism: An eloquent glance into a common night, 28 May 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Saturday Night (Hardcover)
Susan Orlean invites us into the brief lives of numerous citizens who are experiencing their typical Saturday nights. One will learn about the history of the weekend, experience rituals and enjoy the company of many interesting individuals. She writes with a comfortable energy and the reader will certainly contemplate the weekend with a new reverence. Visit cruisers, diners, dieters and polka dancers. Understand their fascinations, their lonliness, their time to relax, their time to look forward to bestial pursuits. I really enjoyed this book and her style is accessible and refreshing.
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Good work of Journalism, Literature, 14 Dec 2000
By edbank "edouglasb" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Saturday Night (Hardcover)
Susan Orlean is a master of taking the would-be normal, humdrum existence of your average person and elevating that person into a character that is both memorable and worth reading. She did it in the Orchid Thief and she does it in Saturday Night, a book composed of chapters each dedicated to how different people spend their average Saturday night. Among the selections are people cruising Main Street, going to dinner, dancing, college students partying and folks staying home. This book explores the history of Saturday night as "the" night that people look forward to and Orlean offers her own take on it. If anything, the book hinges on the reader's curiosity about what others are doing on any given weekend evening. If you're not curious, or not willing to sit through other people's seemingly routine experiences, this book may not be for you. If you are at all curious about the world around you, and what people do to blow off steam, buy this book today.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Exquisite Voyeurism: An eloquent glance into a common night, 28 May 1999
By phaedra@napanet.net - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Saturday Night (Hardcover)
Susan Orlean invites us into the brief lives of numerous citizens who are experiencing their typical Saturday nights. One will learn about the history of the weekend, experience rituals and enjoy the company of many interesting individuals. She writes with a comfortable energy and the reader will certainly contemplate the weekend with a new reverence. Visit cruisers, diners, dieters and polka dancers. Understand their fascinations, their lonliness, their time to relax, their time to look forward to bestial pursuits. I really enjyed this book and her style is accessible and refreshing.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Saturday Night, 23 Mar 2008
By pia - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Saturday Night (Hardcover)
Susan Orlean's, Saturday Night is a glance into the lives of any average American on Saturday nights. Within a few years of research, Orlean explores a variety of nightly activities, including visits to fraternity parties, polka dancers, dieting clubs, etc. Orlean has excellent writing techniques that seem to draw in readers, regardless of age. Orlean also tends to research thoroughly, writing about every age group, from the high school crowd, all the way up to people in their senior years. The book fulfills its goal in touching almost every group of Americans and leaves the reader satisfied.
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