Perfumes: The Guide | 
enlarge | Authors: Luca Turin, Tania Sanchez Publisher: Viking Adult Category: Book
List Price: $27.95 Buy New: $16.06 You Save: $11.89 (43%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 46 reviews Sales Rank: 1242
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 400 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 5.5 x 1.6
ISBN: 0670018651 Dewey Decimal Number: 668.54 EAN: 9780670018659 ASIN: 0670018651
Publication Date: April 10, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Absolutely Brand New & In Stock. 100% 30-Day Money Back. Direct from our warehouse. Ships by USPS. 1+ million customers served-In business since 1986. Happy Customers is Our #1 Goal. Toll Free Support
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Book Description The first book of its kind: a definitive guide to the world of perfume
Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez are experts in the world of scent. Turin, a renowned scientist, and Sanchez, a longtime perfume critic, have spent years sniffing the world's most elegant and beautiful--as well as some truly terrible--perfumes. In Perfumes: The Guide, they combine their talents and experience to review more than twelve hundred fragrances, separating the divine from the good from the monumentally awful. Through witty, irreverent, and illuminating prose, the reviews in Perfumes not only provide consumers with an essential guide to shopping for fragrance, but also make for a unique reading experience.
Perfumes features introductions to women's and men's fragrances and an informative "frequently asked questions" section including: What is the difference between eau de toilette and perfume? How long can I keep perfume before it goes bad? What's better: splash bottles or spray atomizers? What are perfumes made of? Should I change my fragrance each season?
Perfumes: The Guide is an authoritative, one-of-a-kind book that will do for fragrance what Robert Parker's books have done for wine. Beautifully designed and elegantly illustrated, this book will be the perfect gift for collectors and anyone who's ever had an interest in the fascinating subject of perfume. Picking a Perfect Perfume For Perfumes: The Guide, Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez tested nearly 1,500 fragrances--some glorious, some foul. Here they offer some humble advice on finding something worth loving among the stinkers. 1. Smell top to bottom Perfumes usually unfold in three (often very different) stages: the sparkling first few minutes are the fragrance's top note, followed by its true personality, known as the heart note, and ending with the base note, aka the drydown, hours later. Something you love at the counter you may loathe by the parking lot. We recommend top-to-bottom tests on skin and on paper, since some scents that disappoint on the heat of skin may shine on your shirtsleeve. 2. Write it down Bring a pen to write names on paper test strips, so you're not in anguish hours later, trying to recall which is the third scent from the left that transports you to Shangri-La. Keep a cheap, possibly extremely trashy paperback on hand, so you can store strips between pages to keep them separate. 3. Rest your nose Noses tune out, which is why you can smell your friends' homes but not your own. Smell no more than five scents per day on paper strips and try on only the best one or two, to keep your nose reliable. 4. Check the radiance To get a good sense of how the perfume will smell to other people as you walk past, try spraying a test strip and leaving it in the room while you step out for a bit. Come back fifteen minutes later and breathe in: that's the radiance.
Product Description The first book of its kind: a definitive guide to the world of perfume
Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez are experts in the world of scent. Turin, a renowned scientist, and Sanchez, a longtime perfume critic, have spent years sniffing the worlds most elegant and beautifulas well as some truly terribleperfumes. In Perfumes: The Guide, they combine their talents and experience to review more than twelve hundred fragrances, separating the divine from the good from the monumentally awful. Through witty, irreverent, and illuminating prose, the reviews in Perfumes not only provide consumers with an essential guide to shopping for fragrance, but also make for a unique reading experience.
Perfumes features introductions to womens and mens fragrances and an informative frequently asked questions section including: What is the difference between eau de toilette and perfume? How long can I keep perfume before it goes bad? Whats better: splash bottles or spray atomizers? What are perfumes made of? Should I change my fragrance each season?
Perfumes: The Guide is an authoritative, one-of-a-kind book that will do for fragrance what Robert Parkers books have done for wine. Beautifully designed and elegantly illustrated, this book will be the perfect gift for collectors and anyone whos ever had an interest in the fascinating subject of perfume.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 41 more reviews...
Enjoy This Book May 15, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book would be important even if it weren't great. But it is! Most of us who wear fragrance make choices in an information wasteland, absent, until now, consumer reports. Perfume lovers, perfume likers and "who me, perfume?" people, read it and rise to the next level.
Those who enjoy the visual and performance arts, couture, wines and other pleasures take for granted that critical reviews anchor our understanding and increase our enjoyment of the art. A good movie will get raves and a bad one will be panned.
Turin and Sanchez transform the industry by talking straight about specific scents. Unlike the women's beauty magazine articles that promote a list of scents, all equally wonderful - just choose one based on your sexy, romantic or sporty personality - these authors tell you What It Smells Like.
It is a relief not to be the manufacturer of scents earning these distinctions: "short-lived sugary fruity blah in a hilariously cheap blinged-out bottle that looks like a toy designed for a six-year old and made in China...like getting lemon juice in a paper cut...synthetic citrus, green-herbal, and woody-amber horror...rubbing alcohol mixed with Palmolive dishwashing liquid...death by jasmine...like chewing tinfoil while staring at a welding arc...wear it at home exclusively, and tape the windows shut...mercifully, doesn't last."
Praise is more detailed and effusive than the bashings, however, and this is where Turin and Sanchez shine.
My complaints are few in number. I waited too long for this book, having followed Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez in perfume blogs for years and loving Turin's French, and much shorter version of the guide published in 1994. Searching the guide for certain scents I've loved, hated or wondered about, I found them not. Hopefully, Perfumes, The Guide Volume Two is not far behind.
Are they snobs? Yes and no. All talk of subjective perception and interpretation aside, these two know that there is such a thing as "good." Quality exists, whence the one to five star ratings. They recognize a place for Elvis on Velvet, but want better for you. Despite occasionally savage criticism - some sins of perfumery are unforgivable to Turin and Sanchez - the playful spirit prevails in the end.
Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez are brilliant, both masters of the notes and the meaning of scent. They serve up a reader-friendly meal of chemistry, fashion, culture and language with a generous helping of mischief.
a treasure May 15, 2008 I am thrilled to have this book on my shelf. Even though I do not agree with all of the reviews, it has been lots of fun to look up my favorite scents as well as those I am considering purchasing. I have been taking the scent pages out of magazines and looking them up so the book is filling up with lots of those 'sniff' samples sticking out of it. The reviews are smart and witty; an imaginative use of language adds to the enjoyment. It is a great combination of information and fun.
Questionable choices, questionable expertise May 12, 2008 6 out of 9 found this review helpful
I hoped for so much more from this!
As a guide, it's a mess. There's a crying lack of indices and solid information about the perfumes reviewed. Classic scents are overlooked as the authors review endless number of flankers and "here today, gone tomorrow" scents.
Much has been made of the tone of the reviews and I agree. This is not a seamless collaboration. Where LT has the heft of years of experience and an academic background, TS's reviews sound like the forum opiner she was until all too recently. She tries to emulate LT's tone, but without his knowledge, it's too meta, too pointless, and too snarky for its own sake.
A shorter book of reviews by Mr. Turin alone, concentrating on scents that have or will stand the test time to the extent of at least more than 6 months of faddishness would have been so much better. In fact... why not just publish a translation of his "Parfums: Le Guide"? It would be much more informative and enjoyable than this hodgepodge.
Puff piece masquerading as a serious guide. May 11, 2008 7 out of 10 found this review helpful
Disappointing. Completely mis-named as "The Guide". Inconsistent in the treatment of each of the perfumes -- some so called reviews are 2 pages long, while others are one sentence. Star reviews do not match up with the comments made, e.g Chanel Coco Mademoiselle.
Considering Luca Turin's well publicised experience with the fragrance industry, I was expecting a series of balanced analyses of perfumes on the market -- instead the "reviews" are biased towards some brands or perfumers and rely more catchphrases and name dropping.
Sure, at times I agreed with the star rating of say, Ange ou Demon (one star), but reading the comments was like watching someone pull the wings off of flies. Mean spirited and cringeworthy.
Would have been more helpful if they'd actually gone into what was wrong/right with the fragrances....e.g "The lemon/herbal clashed with the sweet vanillic base note." Instead of going on about cough syrup and how many coats of paint a ferrari needs.
I would not be using this to choose (or avoid) my next perfume. Opinionated schlock which is useless as a guide.
not perfect but wonderful May 11, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I got an e-mail from Amazon (not that it's personal) to write a review of this book. After looking over the others, I don't really see what I can add, but here's my four cents:
1. It's a bit sad to me that folks are so insecure. So what if Turin and Sachez have a different opinion than you? I have heard people say they were devastated that The Guide doesn't say "their scent" is great. It doesn't say some of my favorites are either, and I could care less.
2. Why is everyone saying it's bitchy? Yes, it's scathing, but it's not bitchy. There's a world of difference. Turin and Sanchez love scent and this comes through. They are having fun, I would imagine. And what do we do when we're having fun? Make jokes. Overstate. No, it's not bitchy, for it's never mean just for the sake of it.
3. These folks are professionals in their field. Dr. Turin designs new scent molecules. It is no wonder that they both go for the unusual and even the unwearable. The vast majority of the mid-scale department store scents smell the same: how would you like it if you had to test these on a regular basis? I'm sure your taste, too, would become more refined and gravitate to more bang than, say, yet another quiet white floral.
4. Folks, have some faith in your own opinions and just enjoy. The bottom line is this: this book is a great deal of fun. If you're looking for a list of ingrediants, google it.
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