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Werken van Esquire
Esquire Drinks: An Opinionated & Irreverent Guide to Drinking With 250 Drink Recipes (2002) 40 exemplaren
Esquire The Meaning of Life: Wit, Wisdom, and Wonder from 65 Extraordinary People (2003) 28 exemplaren
The Esquire treasury; the best of twenty years of Esquire fact, fiction, and laughter, including seventy-three stories… (1953) 27 exemplaren
Esquire The Meaning of Life: Wisdom, Humor, and Damn Good Advice from 64 Extraordinary Lives (2009) 26 exemplaren
Esquire Magazine 23 exemplaren
Esquire's Things a Man Should Know About Marriage: A Groom's Guide to the Wedding and Beyond (1999) 19 exemplaren
Esquire's What Every Young Man Should Know: An Unconventional Guide for the Perceptive Young Man (1962) 17 exemplaren
The Esquire culinary companion, being an exotic cookery book; or, Around Europe with knife, fork, and spoon (1959) 17 exemplaren
Fathers and Sons: 11 Great Writers Talk about Their Dads, Their Boys, and What It Means to Be a Man (Esquire Books… (2010) 13 exemplaren
Esquire Magazine - Fiftieth Anniversary Collector's Issue: How We Lived 1933-1983 (1983) 13 exemplaren
Esquire 12 exemplaren
Esquire What I've Learned: The Meaning of Life According to 65 Artists, Athletes, Leaders & Legends (2015) 11 exemplaren
Esquire's World of Humor (ESQUIRE'S WORLD OF HUMOR: Hilarious Cartoons, Criticism, Photos, Essays and Fiction by the… (1964) 8 exemplaren
Esquire How to Be a Man: A Handbook of Advice, Inspiration, and Occasional Drinking (2014) 8 exemplaren
Esquire's 1945 Jazz Book 7 exemplaren
How to Be a Better Man: An Esquire eBook 4 exemplaren
Esquire's book of fishing 4 exemplaren
The Eat Like a Man Guide to Feeding a Crowd: How to Cook for Family, Friends, and Spontaneous Parties 3 exemplaren
Esquire's Jazz Book 1944: Armed Services Edition 2 exemplaren
Esquire's What Every Young Man Should Know: An Unconventional Guide for the Perceptive Young Man 2 exemplaren
Stories for the Sixties 1 exemplaar
Esquire's jazz book (1944) 1 exemplaar
Esquire (December 1975) 1 exemplaar
Esquire Magazine, June/July 2012 1 exemplaar
Esquire Magazine - Jan 1989 - Volume 111, No. 1 1 exemplaar
New Esquire Etiquette, the 1 exemplaar
Esquire Magazine, August 2012 1 exemplaar
Esquire Magazine, July 2009 1 exemplaar
ESQUIRE MAGAZINE SOUND TOUR ITALY vinyl record 1 exemplaar
The Sixth new year, a resolution 1 exemplaar
ESQUIRE GOOD GROOMING FOR MEN 1 exemplaar
Coronet Magazine, v.39 no.4 (1956 Feb.) 1 exemplaar
Esquire-The American Man 1946-1986 1 exemplaar
Esquir 1 exemplaar
The Art of Mixing Drinks -- Based on the Famous Esquire Drink Book with 64 Cartoons from Esquire 1 exemplaar
Esquire Magazine (10/73) 1 exemplaar
Esquire Magazine: Megan Fox (June 2009) 1 exemplaar
Esquire Magazine (June, 2007) Jeremy Piven Cover 1 exemplaar
ESQUIRE: 40th Anniversary Celebration 1 exemplaar
HILARY SWANK ESQUIRE MAGAZINE APRIL 2007! 1 exemplaar
The Big Black Book 1 exemplaar
Esquire - 75th Anniversary 1 exemplaar
Esquire España #39 1 exemplaar
Esquire Great Body 1 exemplaar
Esquire The Award-winning magazine for men 1 exemplaar
Esquire's Handbook for Boys 1 exemplaar
Esquire '65 1 exemplaar
Esquire's All About Women. Edited by Saul Maloff and the editors of Esquire Magazine. Illustrated by Tomi Ungerer (1963) 1 exemplaar
Homo-Spiele 1 exemplaar
Esquire 1972, No. 5 1 exemplaar
Esquire Latinoamérica #20 1 exemplaar
Esquire España #37 1 exemplaar
Esquire, July 2008 Issue 1 exemplaar
Brad Pitt l The Esquire 100 l Izabel Goulart l Friday Night Lights - October, 2006 Esquire (2006) 1 exemplaar
Esquire, The Magazine for Men (April 1936) 1 exemplaar
Esquire Magazine November 1935 1 exemplaar
Esquire Success, Persuasive Speaking 1 exemplaar
Esquire's First sports reader 1 exemplaar
Esquire's 2nd sports reader 1 exemplaar
Esquire, June to December, 1934. Vol. II 1 exemplaar
Esquire China April 2011 1 exemplaar
Esquire, Autumn, 1933 to May, 1934. Vol. I 1 exemplaar
Esquire. Dec., 1939; Jan.-Aug., Oct.-Dec., 1940 1 exemplaar
Esquire Magazine, July 1942 1 exemplaar
ESQUIRE, April 1949 1 exemplaar
Esquire España #21 1 exemplaar
Esquire's Culinary Counsel for Men 1 exemplaar
Esquire Volume 105 no. 6 1 exemplaar
Esquire (December 2003) 1 exemplaar
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Anyway, to riff off that a little bit, I loved the Emerson quote—Emerson was a rebel, and he believed in being happy—but basically I just want to talk about how I am a man, and I bought a book about clothes.
Getting into clothes actually makes me feel like I understand a little about girls getting into books, at least school-y ones. Girls do read and write more books nowadays—although in the Wonderful Past it was different, and men still direct almost all of the movies—but especially with school-y books it is like a woman is outside of her own home. Even if she reads serious women’s interests books, people never tire of pointing out that the girls who write those books are a little “like men”, and obviously part of the pleasure of a guy reading Tom Clancy or military history is that girls almost never do, and have almost or basically no one, as the case might be, who is like them in that type of book.
I always tried to think of books as being universal—well, for years at least, I’ve done that—and I’ve read all six major Jane Austen books as well as other less-scintillatingly-rational romances, to kinda balance out the usually-male and basically-masculine fields like philosophy and science. But I was always a little sad that I was conscious that a girl might not think it’s enough, that it’s still “not her own ground”, those school-y books, you know….
Now that I’m getting into clothes, I kinda get it. A broad-minded woman who has like 600 books on fashion might well buy and read a men’s fashion books like this to be of assistance to her friends of a more masculine persuasion—I guess it might be a little unusual—but even if she did, and told some guy friend, I can help you buy clothes (for the wedding/for your date/for our date), a lot of guys would be like…. Clothes? But aren’t I…. a man? Do men wear clothes?
In a specific way, you know.
And there is a sort of interesting parallelism, you know. Many of the best/most cool clothing stores are exclusively for women, many of the largest are almost entirely for women, and there some stores that sell to both, but it’s like…. Still a clothing store, you know. Again, the parallelism is interesting, you know. (Military history/Shakespeare/common novels—‘Oh, sure! Romance! Men!’, you know.)
But, since I’d like to attract a girl, and make her think that I respect “her own ground”, so to speak, and maybe even talk about Regency Jane and Baroque Bill without coming off as a touch daft, you know…. (shrugs)
I think I’ll even keep it when I’m done!….
(Boy) Does ‘scintillating’ mean, ‘sparkly’?
(Girl) (makes face) I THINK so…. Why, did someone use that word, in a book you were reading?
(Boy) (considers this, then) No. No, they did not. Come, let’s go buy clothes.
(Girl) Okay.
…. Anyway.
I mean, on the positive, I think it’s good and helpful that it mentions different brands to investigate and possibly buy, mostly for looking dressier, but there is useful information.
But the ‘advice’—hand-me-down Downton Abbey crap—about what to get rid of when you’re not young anymore—I mean I’m NOT young anymore, and that IS different, but it’s so like, Never have fun again. It’s like more about adultism than actually being attractive, or having a personal style. It’s like, YES, I’m going to wear my Slytherin shirt again, I don’t care that I’m 30-something, and I’m going to get Ravenclaw, too, so I can have all four of them, and dress in any Harry Potter House I damn well want to if I want to, and YES I’m going to get the Tarot Fool shirt—no, not even the Hermit, the Fool—and I bet you I wear it, too.
AND I can remember to take my Chuck Taylors out of the box I’m carefully preserving them in—no one sees me, usually—and wear them to family Christmas instead of my usual nondescript shoes, you know.
BUT, every day is NOT a wedding, and I am Not some ghostly earl, you know.
…. “If you care about style, then dressing up for a night out is basically like Christmas, your birthday, and summer vacation all rolled into one.”
Seriously? That statements calls for some kind of mocking nickname, like maybe ‘Birthday Boy’, you know. It’s the sartorial equivalent of saying, “We read Homer in the GREEK”, you know—you find the exact center, and then you build a giant castle there and ask a goblin to hold you prisoner so that you can always be on the bridge of the starship Enterprise, where you can make a difference, you know.
…. And remember kids—keep it vegan!
“Nonsense, killing is Essential: killing and being dismissive. You’re dismissed.”
…. I mean, you can develop your own style if you want, and the way you dress has to work for you, however you do it, but it always puzzles me how straight, conventional people can actually use their dressing-up attraction-boost process as a way to conveniently underline what gender they are NOT, you know. I wouldn’t want it done to me; I wouldn’t want to do it.
…. Lots of great movie and celebrity references, though. It’s strange that something so focused on the most visual aspect of visual media, and one of the easiest skills to make fun of, should be so snobby and guarded, you know. Consider the wine snob. Even when he’s getting arrested for drunk driving, he’ll still be mocking other people for not being as cultured as he is, and in perfect form, you know. Like a sonnet writer: he could get drunk and talk about dressing down his niece, and he still wouldn’t let you forget that his sense of a rhyme scheme is better than yours, right.
…. And I seriously think his obsession with Jon Hamm isn’t healthy; he literally shows his face three times. Listen Jay, I know you still think it’s 1960…. But Jon Hamm makes fun of little girls who don’t have chemistry degrees and who should surrender and accept their lack of intrinsic worth but don’t because patriarchy is in decline, you know…. 🤪
…. Anyway: terrible writing, terrible values; worthwhile for technical points & reference purposes.
…. But yeah: if Dan Humphrey from “Gossip Girl” had read this book, without turning into a combination of Blair and a character from “Downton Abbey” or “Mad Men”—it really would have rounded-out his character. A pretty girl should be able to buy you something for Christmas that’s not a cheap used paperback book, you know—assuming she doesn’t just want to throw herself at you, lol. 😸 (Although THAT I guess would end up on the Gossip Girl site, lol. I guess you could lie, of course. “I bought him a trip….” 😹)… (meer)