kirkus reviews
“A
snappy tour of the method
behind the cosmetics industry's madness,
from the former beauty editor of Glamour,
Mirabella, and InStyle.
In cosmetics, Gavenas explains,
“the most successful companies are the
ones that spin the fantasies that the most women
want to hear. And anyone with
a good enough story can still make it big
in the beauty business.” That’s
big—as in $29 billion in sales last year
in the U.S.—and though the Revlons and
Lauders and Mary Kays dominate, smaller entrepreneurs
have also dipped into this bottomless paint
pot. Create your own color story: if the big
houses say, “For spring the story [is]
pink,” then start your own line, call
it Urban Decay, and push your shades of Roach,
Smog, and Mildew with the slogan “Does
pink make you puke?” Count $6 million
to $9 million in sales the first year. The basically
democratic nature of cosmetics strikes the author’s
fancy—a few dollars for some atmosphere,
makeovers free and fun at the beauty counter—and
she reminds us that early fighters for women's
rights saw makeup as a badge of courage:
“Painting your face meant writing
your own story, independent of whatever
your husband or father had drawn up.”
On a more cynical note, Gavenas declares: “Forget
feminism. There's nothing like making
money off other women to prove how powerful
sisterhood can be.” And women are powerful
in this industry because “men just don't
get it.” The author revels in the dialectic
of fabulism and the simple act of applying lipstick,
the overstatement and the understatement, the
rags to riches.
Histories of cosmetic houses and the process
of making cosmetics provide welcome doses of
reality, but Gavenas really prefers the conjuring
from thin air: “Makeup will spin storylines
for clothes that have none.”
Fundamentally, the beauty business
is all about yearning and fantasy, promises
and possibilities, fashioning the mood of the
moment, and Gavenas explicates the fantasy so
well that—yes—even
men will get it.”
Publishers
Weekly
“Gavenas
effectively captures
the attitude of the industry with her descriptions
of photo shoots, runways and fabric shows, making
this a well-crafted
story of a booming industry.” |