An enduring comic novel of ambition, glamour, and self-invention in the Jazz Age.
First published in 1925, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes presents the irrepressible diary of Lorelei Lee, a young woman navigating the social and financial currents of New York, Paris, and beyond. With disarming candour and calculated charm, Lorelei records her encounters with wealthy admirers, fashionable society, and the practical realities of securing one's future in a world governed by money and appearances.
Anita Loos's satire operates with lightness and precision. Beneath the novel's sparkling humour lies a pointed commentary on class, consumer culture, and the transactional nature of modern romance. Lorelei's voice-apparently naïve yet shrewdly observant-exposes the contradictions of an era intoxicated by wealth and spectacle.
A defining work of American popular fiction in the 1920s, Gentlemen Prefer Blondes remains both a lively social document and a sharp critique of the values it depicts.
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