Ebook: Slaughterhouse 90210
Author: Maris Kreizman
- Genre: Other Social Sciences // Cultural
- Tags: Satire, Humor, Humor & Entertainment, Movements & Periods, Ancient & Classical, Arthurian Romance, Beat Generation, Feminist, Gothic & Romantic, LGBT, Medieval, Modern, Modernism, Postmodernism, Renaissance, Shakespeare, Surrealism, Victorian, History & Criticism, Literature & Fiction, Reference, Almanacs & Yearbooks, Atlases & Maps, Careers, Catalogs & Directories, Consumer Guides, Dictionaries & Thesauruses, Encyclopedias & Subject Guides, English as a Second Language, Etiquette, Foreign Language Study & Reference, Genealog
- Year: 2015
- Publisher: Flatiron Books
- Edition: F First Edition
- Language: English
- epub
The perfect book for anyone with a Netflix account and a library card.
"A real live cultural argument. Fun and funny, yes, but also surprising, moving, and thoughtful."
- NPR
"Smart, sharp, and hilarious, Slaughterhouse 90210 is the perfect pick-me-up and never-put-me-down book." - Jami Attenberg, bestselling author of The Middlesteins
Slaughterhouse 90210 pairs literature's greatest lines with pop culture's best moments.
In 2009, Maris Kreizman wanted to combine her fierce love for pop culture with a lifelong passion for reading, and so the blog Slaughterhouse 90210 was born. By matching poignant passages from literature with popular moments from television, film, and real life, Maris' work instantly caught the attention (and adoration) of thousands. And it's easy to see why.
Slaughterhouse 90210 is subversively brilliant, finding the depth in the shallows of reality television, and the levity in Lahiri. A picture of Taylor Swift is paired with Joan Didion's quote, "Above all, she is the girl who 'feels things'. The girl ever wounded, ever young." Tony Soprano tenderly hugs his teenage son, accompanied by a line from Middlemarch about, "The patches of hardness and tenderness [that] lie side by side in men's dispositions." The images and quotes complement and deepen one another in surprising, profound, and tender ways.
With over 150 color photographs from some of popular culture's most iconic moments, Kreizman shows why comparing Walter White to Faust makes sense in our celebrity obsessed, tv crazed society.