Gentlemen Prefer Blondes

Gentlemen Prefer Blondes

A Novel

About the Book

A compulsively readable, brilliantly satirical novel, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes follows the wide-eyed blonde Lorelei Lee and her cynical brunette friend Dorothy Shaw as they travel across the Atlantic and take Europe by storm.

Some might call Lorelei Lee lucky. Others, names she would not even put in her diary. Life in New York is becoming routine, so when her wealthy companion Mr. Eisman suggests that “a girl with brains ought to do something else with them besides think,” Lorelei is up to the challenge.

Accompanied by her best friend Dorothy Shaw, Lorelei chronicles the sights and people of Europe in her diary in a consistent mix of hilarity and accidental wisdom--“Paris is devine” and “London is really nothing at all.” Reliant on the good graces of the gentlemen around them to stay afloat as they await Eisman’s arrival on the continent, Lorelei and Dorothy skirt unscathed and at times oblivious around scorned and greedy lovers, plots of Francophone thievery, and even murder charges.

This hilarious, rip-roaring travelogue is a sharp-eyed takedown of the hypocrisy of Prohibition, the Roaring Twenties, and anyone foolish enough to stake their wallet on the dumb blonde stereotype. Gentlemen Prefer Blondes is more than a guilty pleasure--it is a literary classic.
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Modern Library Torchbearers Series

Plum Bun
The House of Madelaine
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
I Am Clarence
Lolly Willowes
The Princess of 72nd Street
Quicksand
Regiment of Women
The Goodness of St. Rocque
A Daughter of the Samurai
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About the Author

Anita Loos
Anita Loos was born in California in 1888. She began writing movie scripts and supplied film scenarios for D.W. Griffith and Douglas Fairbanks. First published in 1925, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes was a best-seller in thirteen languages and was followed by its sequel, But Gentlemen Marry Brunettes. Anita Loos was the author of the novels A Mouse is Born and No Mother to Guide Her and two volumes of autobiography, A Girl Like I and Kiss Hollywood Good-by. She died in 1981. More by Anita Loos
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