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Quintessence

Authors: Betty Cornfield, Owen Edwards
Publisher: Three Rivers Press
Category: Book

List Price: $12.95
Buy Used: $0.01
You Save: $12.94 (100%)



Used (25) from $0.01

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 1949568

Media: Paperback
Edition: 1st
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 150
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 10.3 x 10.3 x 0.5

ISBN: 0517550903
Dewey Decimal Number: 601.3
EAN: 9780517550908
ASIN: 0517550903

Publication Date: February 13, 1983
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Quintessential
  • Hardcover - Quintessence: The Quality of Having It
  • Hardcover - Quintessence: The Quality of Having It

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Here are 65 exemplary items--illustrated with black-and-white photographs and accompanied by a terse, amusing, and completely arbitrary essay arguing each item's case for quintessence. 65 black-and-white photographs.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The writing in Quintessence is quintessential.   November 4, 2007
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Buy this book if only for the opening essay, 'Sense and Quintessence', which has to be the most erudite, insightful, historical, philosophical, piece written on the subject. It is, in fact, quintessential.

All my life I have recognized 'the thing in and of itself'...the genuine article...the real McCoy...the person or object with real soul. Cornfeld and Owens have given me the words - beautiful words - to describe this instinctual knowledge.

This is not to underplay the rest of the book. The essay is transcendent; the rest is stunning.

Heinously, on the 1983 publisher's, (Black Dog & Leventhal), website, the book is called a "coffee table" book. That is akin to saying that Kant's Critique of Pure Reason is very good with a lamp set upon it. It is also not a design book, nor a book about over-attachment to material goods. It is about essence as absolute.

The book is also great fun and ripe with facts you did not know about some of the most popular products in our culture.



5 out of 5 stars I like this book   March 1, 2003
 1 out of 3 found this review helpful

We need another book like this. Most design books lack "it".


4 out of 5 stars This book has It   February 28, 2001
 5 out of 7 found this review helpful

Americans today are sick of things. We've got way too many of them and most of them are utterly useless, oftentimes almost grotesque in their superfluity. A flip side to this overload is that we, especially the younger generation, lose touch with how beautiful and life-enhancing a thing can actually be. We're awash in things, but ignorant of "thingness." In all the rhetoric about possessions not creating happiness--true at bottom but overdone--we're forgetting that, yeah, actually, some things do make me pretty damn happy.

This book Quintessence shows us a few of these special things and allows us to enjoy them by pointing them out, and on a more general level the book persuasively argues for a re-appreciation of objects of affection and even of utility. The things shown in this book vary widely--from a brown paper bag to a Harley Davidson to a Camel cigarette to a Keds hightop--all sharing the one common quality of "quintessence," the quality of having it. At least as the authors see "it," that is. Fortunately, they're almost always right. I came across no thing in the book that I rejected as having a classical "thingness" that, once recognized, does work on the senses and can sometimes even bring an unconscious smile to your face. Accompanying the photos of these objects is stylish, flowing prose from Edwards and Cornfeld, both accomplished writers and people of fine taste. Edwards, now a columnist at Forbes ASAP, has written on topics as diverse as men's clothing, technology, office politics and the difference between how West Coasters work vs. New Yorkers, and all of his work exhibits this special talent of searching for, and often finding, the essence of the thing. The book, then, is a joy to read as well as look at the pictures. I came away with a new appreciation for the things I love in life--I remember my fifth-grade red nikes, my Costco-bought Spalding basketball, the Ferrari Testarossa--and I think others who read this book will do the same.

Unfortunately, the copy being sold on this website is not up to snuff with the quality of the book itself. There are a couple missprints and the page layout next to the pictures isn't great. The original printing of this book now retails for large sums, sometimes in excess of 700 dollars, and imagining how fine this book well-printed would be offers a clue as to why. For persons of lesser means, however, this copy will do just fine to get the message across: don't forget, amidst plenty, the value and aesthetic pleasure to be gained from one, loved thing.

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