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The Ugly History of Beautiful Things: Essays on Desire and Consumption

The Ugly History of Beautiful Things: Essays on Desire and Consumption

by Katy Kelleher

Simon & Schuster ·2023 ·272 pages
Maybe Someday
Maybe Someday
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Near the Top

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About This Book

Paris Review contributor Katy Kelleher explores our obsession with gorgeous things, unveiling the fraught histories of makeup, flowers, perfume, silk, and other beautiful objects. April recommended reading by the New York Times Book Review , Vanity Fair , Goodreads , Jezebel , Christian Science Monitor , All Arts , and the Next Big Idea Club One of Curbed 's and Globe and Mail 's (Toronto) best books of the spring A most anticipated book of 2023 by The Millions Katy Kelleher has spent much of her life chasing beauty. As a child, she uprooted handfuls of purple, fragrant little flowers from the earth, plucked iridescent seashells from the beach, and dug for turquoise stones in her backyard. As a teenager she applied glittery shimmer to her eyelids after religiously dabbing on her signature scent of orange blossoms and jasmine. And as an adult, she coveted gleaming marble countertops and delicate porcelain to beautify her home. This obsession with beauty led her to become a home, garden, and design writer, where she studied how beautiful things are mined, grown, made, and enhanced. In researching these objects, Kelleher concluded that most of us are blind to the true cost of our desires. Because whenever you find something unbearably beautiful, look closer, and you'll inevitably find a shadow of decay lurking underneath. In these dazzling and deeply researched essays, Katy Kelleher blends science, history, and memoir to uncover the dark underbellies of our favorite goods. She reveals the crushed beetle shells in our lipstick, the musk of rodents in our perfume, and the burnt cow bones baked into our dishware. She untangles the secret history of silk and muses on her problematic prom dress. She tells the story of countless workers dying in their efforts to bring us shiny rocks from unsafe mines that shatter and wound the earth, all because a diamond company created a compelling ad. She examines the enduring appeal of the beautiful dead girl and the sad fate of the ugly mollusk. With prose as stunning as the objects she describes, Kelleher invites readers to examine their own relationships with the beautiful objects that adorn their body and grace their homes. And yet, Kelleher argues that while we have a moral imperative to understand our relationship to desire, we are not evil or weak for desiring beauty. The Ugly History of Beautiful Things opens our eyes to beauty that surrounds us, helps us understand how that beauty came to be, what price was paid and by whom, and how we can most ethically partake in the beauty of the world.


Reviews

"Through personal revelation and scholarly research, Kelleher's engrossing essays cogently explore the unsettling dichotomy between the precious and the problematic, the seedy and the sublime to vividly reveal the pleasures and perils in pursuit of ideal beauty."

Carol Haggas· Booklist Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"Kelleher skillfully dissects many kinds of things that humans have found desirable over the years."

Becky Libourel Diamond· BookPage Read review ↗ Near the Top

"She carries the weight of that research with elegance and ease, drawing on interviews as well as texts that range from antiquity to contemporary years."

Natalia Holtzman· The Minneapolis Star Tribune Read review ↗ Near the Top

"At once offers and exemplifies a sophisticated framework for what we do with our guilt in a world where there's no ethical consumption"

Maggie Lange· The Washington Post Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

"She has a knack for nimbly threading together her own memories and tastes with the histories of the objects themselves ..."

Jennifer Szalai· The New York Times Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Grimly illuminating ..."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Kelleher has always been obsessed with beauty, and this poetic book is a careful study of its ambiguity and meaning."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Kelleher smartly opts to explore the impulse to buy rather than moralizing about it."

Lily Meyer· The Atlantic Read review ↗ Top of the Pile

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