''Haiken has written a humane, balanced history of cosmetic surgery, drawing with sensitivity and deftness on impressive archival sources, including surgeons' folders on prospective patients . . . Her book is a first-class exercise in medical history, raising intriguing questions about normalization, ideological manipulation, gender, ethnicity, and the profit motive in medicine.''--Richard Davenport-Hines, Nature ''What makes Venus Envy such an enthralling read is that alongside a host of macabre and 'no--really!' stories . . . there is a hugely intelligent and perceptive analysis of American culture and history going on.''--London Times Face lifts, nose jobs, breast implants, liposuction, collagen injectionsthe body at the end of the twentieth century has become endlessly mutable, and surgical alteration has become an accepted part of American culture. In Venus Envy, Elizabeth Haiken traces the quest for physical perfection through surgery from the turn of the century to the present. Drawing on a wide array of sourcespersonal accounts, medical records, popular magazines, medical journals, and beauty guidesHaiken reveals how our culture came to see cosmetic surgery as a panacea for both individual and social problems. ''An informative, often engaging account of the history of cosmetic surgery in the United States.''--Parade Magazine ''Original, well-researched, and a pleasure to read. It constitutes an astute analysis of the modern commodification of the body and the role of the medical profession in such developments.''Roy Porter, Times Higher Education Supplement ''This is an important book, raising provocative questions about the ubiquity of cosmetic surgery in our culture . . . I'll certainly draw on its insights when counseling patients considering cosmetic surgery.''--Janet E. Shepherd, M.D., Journal of the American Medical Association ''An entertaining history and serious analysis of the tensions among professional medicine, entrepreneurial practitioners, and the mutable ideal of beauty that reminds us how unchanging is the American search for self-improvement . . . If Venus Envy is a history of cosmetic surgery, it is equally a political history of beauty.''--Sharon Lieberman, Women's Review of Books