Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Tinsel (novel)

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Cover artist
  
Richard Huebner

Publication date
  
1979

ISBN
  
0-385-29031-4

Author
  
William Goldman

Publisher
  
Dell Publishing

3.2/5
AbeBooks

Language
  
English

Pages
  
342

Originally published
  
1979

Page count
  
342

Country
  
United States of America

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Tinsel is a 1979 novel written by William Goldman. It was the third of a four-book deal he had with Delacorte Press after Marathon Man and Magic. He called it "my Hollywood novel". He began writing it on April Fools' Day 1978 and finished it five months' later.

Goldman said in a 1979 interview that he was motivated to write the novel to explore the treatment of women in Hollywood:

There are a couple of basic truths about this town. One is that nobody knows anything about what will work. It's all a search for past magic. Those who can no longer produce it are useless. The other truth is that everyone in the movie community is searching for heat. John Travolta was the hottest thing ever-ever; only Dustin Hoffman after The Graduate and Midnight Cowboy was comparable. Then Travolta made a movie with Lily Tomlin (Moment to Moment) and where were his fans? Farrah Fawcett is a year from game shows. This is why we're all so nervous. There's no carry over of affection. It's why nobody can cut their price. You're worth a million dollars or you're unemployed. That's what happened to Elizabeth Taylor and what I wanted to tell in Tinsel. What happens to the women of Hollywood?

Reception

Larry McMurtry reviewing the book for the New York Times said "Mr Goldman never gets beneath the stereotypes".

References

Tinsel (novel) Wikipedia