"Delivered in a suitably amped prose style, the story casts light on the early days of bodybuilding and gym culture, before New York Sports Clubs existed in every neighborhood"—Steven Kurutz , Wall Street Journal "It's fantastic."—Dan Fogarty , Sportsgrid.com "Solotaroff is a respected journalist who writes for Men's Journal and Rolling Stone ... But in the mid-1970s, he was a college student who got into weight lifting and steroids, and followed his obsession into a life as a male stripper and a drug addict who attended orgies in the wild world of New York in the disco era. The Body Shop is a cautionary tale that's also an entertaining time-trip into the recent past."—Jeff Baker , The Oregonian "as Solotaroff explains in The Body Shop , his smart and funny book that chronicles his own summer of steroids, using drugs often comes with a terrible physical and emotional price."—Michael O?Keeffe , New York Daily News "I can't tell you in strong enough terms how terrific Paul Solotaroff's new book, The Body Shop , is. We spend a lot of time wringing our hands about steroids, and not nearly enough discussing the powerful lures and temptations of building perfect bodies. Take a tour through this eloquent memoir and it will make a lot more sense."—Mike Vaccaro , The New York Post "[A] very well-written and surprisingly tender book.... Whatever the depth and duration of [Solotaroff's] crises of confidence, though, this book shows that he was always a writer at heart."—Megan Buskey , New York Times Book Review
"[A] very well-written and surprisingly tender book.... Whatever the depth and duration of [Solotaroff's] crises of confidence, though, this book shows that he was always a writer at heart."
Megan Buskey - New York Times Book Review
"I can't tell you in strong enough terms how terrific Paul Solotaroff's new book, The Body Shop , is. We spend a lot of time wringing our hands about steroids, and not nearly enough discussing the powerful lures and temptations of building perfect bodies. Take a tour through this eloquent memoir and it will make a lot more sense."
Mike Vaccaro - The New York Post
"as Solotaroff explains in The Body Shop , his smart and funny book that chronicles his own summer of steroids, using drugs often comes with a terrible physical and emotional price."
Michael O?Keeffe - New York Daily News
"Solotaroff is a respected journalist who writes for Men's Journal and Rolling Stone ... But in the mid-1970s, he was a college student who got into weight lifting and steroids, and followed his obsession into a life as a male stripper and a drug addict who attended orgies in the wild world of New York in the disco era. The Body Shop is a cautionary tale that's also an entertaining time-trip into the recent past."
Jeff Baker - The Oregonian
"It's fantastic."
Dan Fogarty - Sportsgrid.com
"Delivered in a suitably amped prose style, the story casts light on the early days of bodybuilding and gym culture, before New York Sports Clubs existed in every neighborhood"
Steven Kurutz - Wall Street Journal
[A] very well-written and surprisingly tender book.... Whatever the depth and duration of [Solotaroff's] crises of confidence, though, this book shows that he was always a writer at heart. New York Times Book Review
I can't tell you in strong enough terms how terrific Paul Solotaroff's new book, The Body Shop , is. We spend a lot of time wringing our hands about steroids, and not nearly enough discussing the powerful lures and temptations of building perfect bodies. Take a tour through this eloquent memoir and it will make a lot more sense. The New York Post
as Solotaroff explains in The Body Shop , his smart and funny book that chronicles his own summer of steroids, using drugs often comes with a terrible physical and emotional price. New York Daily News
Solotaroff is a respected journalist who writes for Men's Journal and Rolling Stone ... But in the mid-1970s, he was a college student who got into weight lifting and steroids, and followed his obsession into a life as a male stripper and a drug addict who attended orgies in the wild world of New York in the disco era. The Body Shop is a cautionary tale that's also an entertaining time-trip into the recent past. The Oregonian
It's fantastic. Sportsgrid.com
Delivered in a suitably amped prose style, the story casts light on the early days of bodybuilding and gym culture, before New York Sports Clubs existed in every neighborhood Wall Street Journal
Men's Journal and Rolling Stone contributor Solotaroff (Group: Six People in Search of a Life, 1999, etc.) delves into his personal struggles with self-perception and body image, the result of a disillusioned childhood and a string of failures in school and work. The uproarious opening chapter is a bittersweet comedy of errors and epiphanies in which one misstep follows another as the author hits rock bottom eating food swiped from a bathroom sink and rummaging through the garbage for a steroid syringe. Solotaroff then goes back to 1975, when, at 6'1" and 140 pounds, "even my hair was depressed." A college dropout at 20, barely subsisting in New York City and receiving little sympathy from his father, he returned to college and became captivated with classmate Mark, a former "stick-thin boy" turned hulking, "stunning male specimen." Over an afternoon of euphoric, blood-pumped basic training with this campus chick magnet, Solotaroff became hooked, resulting in an experiment in narcissistic self-improvement gone haywire. Workout buddy Kenny introduced steroids, and three months in, Solotaroff gained 30 pounds of muscle and became "a butch burlesque of male pride." The author, virtually unrecognizable to his parents, was lost in a swirl of calories, skin-tight clothes, nightclubs, cocaine, orgies and even happiness, albeit temporary. Training with Angel, a black bodybuilding playboy, gave Solotaroff access to more steroids, but being constantly "ravenous and speedy" burned him out on his life as a stripper and as a boyfriend to Kate. As sad as the author's downward spiral becomes, his yearning for bodily transformation is captivating. With his body collapsing from the drug regimen, the regret becomes palpable as he reconsiders his vainglorious quest. A sobering, briskly told tale of bigorexia.