Foto dell'autore

Ted Mark (1928–2004)

Autore di The Man from O.R.G.Y.

41 opere 356 membri 2 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Nota di disambiguazione:

(eng) Ted Gottfried wrote literate smut under several pseudonyms, most famously as Ted Mark. He also contributed to series works using corporate pseudonyms used by multiple authors such as Blakely St. James, Kathleen Fuller and Lorayne Ashton.

Serie

Opere di Ted Mark

The Man from O.R.G.Y. (1965) 39 copie
The 9-Month Caper (1965) 25 copie
Dr. Nyet (1966) 24 copie
Room at the Topless (1967) 20 copie
The Real Gone Girls (1966) 19 copie
My Son, The Double Agent (1966) 17 copie
The Girl From Pussycat (1965) 16 copie
A Hard Day's Knight (1966) 14 copie
The Nude Who Never (1965) 13 copie
The Man from Charisma (1970) 12 copie
The Nude Wore Black (1967) 10 copie

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Nome legale
Gottfried, Theodore Mark
Altri nomi
Mark, Ted
Gottfried, Ted
St. James, Blakely (corporate pseudonym)
Behan, Leslie
Kyle, Benjamin
Fuller, Kathleen (corporate pseudonym)
Data di nascita
1928-10-19
Data di morte
2004-03-07
Sesso
male
Nazionalità
USA
Luogo di nascita
Bronx, New York, USA
Luogo di morte
Manhattan, New York, USA
Luogo di residenza
Bronx, New York, USA
Far Rockaway, New York, USA
Cedarhurst, New York, USA
Nota di disambiguazione
Ted Gottfried wrote literate smut under several pseudonyms, most famously as Ted Mark. He also contributed to series works using corporate pseudonyms used by multiple authors such as Blakely St. James, Kathleen Fuller and Lorayne Ashton.

Utenti

Recensioni

Ted Mark was quite a prolific writer whose many works included including a 1960s/ 70s era series of satirical paperbacks that tapped into the James Bond/ Man from Uncle/ Maxwell Smart craze. His titles included "The Man from O.R.G.Y.," "The Nude Wore Black," "Room at the Topless," "The Girl from Pussycat," and "Dr. Nyet." Imagine a combination of secret agents, mini-skirted beauties, bachelor pads, rock and roll, and unbridled (soft core) sexual innuendo, and you'll have the idea. These were pulp fiction at its pulpiest, and Marks (who later became an ardent supporter of feminist causes) lived to feel chagrin at his sexploitation of the gender stereotypes. To enjoy his cheaper works today takes suspension of sociopolitical judgments that few adult readers are likely to find possible.

As for "I Was a Teeny Bopper for the CIA", given its hilarious title and cover illustration, you'd think this might be far removed from anything like a timeless work. And you'd be right. When I read it decades ago, it appealed to my love of irreverence and the outrageous flouting of traditional mores. But having tried it again recently, I was sad to find it unreadable. Reading it felt like stepping into a time machine. However, the time when this sort of thing pushed the envelope in the humorous direction has gone the way of beehive hairdos, swing clubs, and the twist. It was fun while it lasted, but this book is for nostalgia fans only.
… (altro)
½
2 vota
Segnalato
danielx | Apr 12, 2015 |
Hilarious spoof, even if you don't get all the 60s allusions - and they're rife: Helen Gurley Brown, Malcolm X, Ayn Rand, Le Corbu, Trotskyites, and 'The Group' (possibly the most boring bestseller ever shipped, and it's taken off deftly here).
1 vota
Segnalato
Patentnonsense | Nov 22, 2009 |

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Statistiche

Opere
41
Utenti
356
Popolarità
#67,310
Voto
2.1
Recensioni
2
ISBN
19

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