Skinny Legs and All

by Tom Robbins
Skinny Legs and All  
published November 1st 1995 by Bantam
first published 1990
binding Paperback
isbn 0553377884   (isbn13: 9780553377880)
pages 432
description An Arab and a Jew open a restaurant together across the street from the United Nations....

It sounds like the beginning of an ethnic joke, bu...more
date added
02-17-07



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Austen
07/18/08

I should start by saying that I'm not a fan of Tom Robbins' novels. I don't dislike his work, but you will not find me among the legions of his fanatical fans. I just need to get that out of the way before I begin...

However, I have enjoyed reading two of his books. I almost put down Still Life With Woodpecker, but because of my admiration for the person who recommended it to me, I made it through. I feel much the same way about this novel. In fact, I did put Skinny Legs down for about six...more
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Greg
08/03/08

Read in February, 2008
I can't think of any other book I've read very recently that left my mind as thoroughly blown as Skinny Legs and All. I'd only read one other Tom Robbins book -- Still Life With Woodpecker -- so I was prepared for his playfulness, humor, intricate (but goofy) language, and overall trippy feel that all come with just about everything he rights.

But I was not prepared for Skinny Legs. This book is so dense with literary magnificence that you could chew it like you had a whole mouth full of stic...more
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Brian
07/07/08

Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: lovers of metaphor and the strange
Loved it!!! Loved every minute of it!!! This is one of those books that when you finally finish the last page, you just sit back in amazement and say, "Wow!!" Over and over again!!

I guess it helps that the subplot revolves around religion and the fanatics who so populate it. As I keep saying, I am not much of a review writer, but I will try to sum the book up in as few words as possible.

I am actually reminded of an old Red Hot Chili Peppers song, "Blood, Sugar Sex Magic!! She'...more
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Reba
Reba rated it: 1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars1 of 5 stars
07/30/07

Read in July, 2007
After having been recommended this book, I was really surprised at how most everything contained within it boiled down to either a simile or a stereotype. I was disturbed by the racism, not so much in the characters (he uses the racism in his archtype of most of the Southerners) but in the narration. Each of the individuals were invariably described not in terms of their personality (or even their importance within the storyline), but were mentioned only as black, palestinian, jewboy, etc. Contr...more
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Anne
06/12/08

recommended to Anne by: Connie?
recommends it for: anyone on my list so far!
Awesome book, Robbins' best IMO. In Skinny Legs, he gives us his trademark whimsy, metaphysics, romance, sex, pseudo-sociopolitical commentary and wacky hijinks without going batshit crazy and self-indulgent with it--Fierce Invalids Home From Hot Climates, I'm looking at you. Tighter narrative structure than Even Cowgirls Get the Blues, more compelling plot than, really, any of his other books, the main wonder of SLaA is its cast of characters. Artist-turned-waitress ...more
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Jennifer
Jennifer rated it: 5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars5 of 5 stars
10/29/07

Read in August, 2007
Tom Robbins, you're so kooky. I loved this book, you know. It is the first Robbins original that I've read. I liked the following...

1) Cherry Ellen Charles

2) that the can of beans was he/she

3)"Welcome to the modern world, Painted Stick."

4)"...knee high to a wiggle worm..." (I've heard of being as such to a pig's eye.)

5)"Money itself was incomprehensible. Almost from its inception, it had perplexed and befuddled those in whose lives it had appear...more
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Rob
Rob rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
09/04/07

bookshelves: own
Read in January, 2003
recommends it for: pilgrims and frustrated artists; also: foot-fetishists
A passage:

"You are an artist. You know that big picture at the museum midtown, that picture by that fellow Rousseau, it is called The Sleeping Gypsy?"

"Yeah. Sure. That's a very famous painting."

"It ought to be called The Sleeping Arab, that picture. An Arab lies in the desert, sleeping under the crazy-faced moon. A lion sniffs at the Arab, the Arab is unafraid..."


See the painting: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Slee...


I...more
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Laura
02/17/08

Read in February, 2008
recommended to Laura by: Jill Z.
I believe this novel was so enjoyable because of its lighthearted mix of the absurd, the everyday, the magical, and the sexual. I consider those the four food groups of fun literature, and they each find a home in this ridiculous tale of self-awakening and revelations of truth. Robbins asserts that patriarchal society has blinded us to a heritage that recognizes and rejoices its feminine deities that embrace expressions of sexuality and the magic of nature. Blinded by “seven veils” of unt...more
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Jessica
Read in January, 2006
Although I have determined that it is impossible for me to pick a favorite Tom Robbins novel, this one is strong in the running.

Ellen Cherry Charles isn't my favorite Robbins woman, but in many ways, she is his most sympathetic female protagonist. Caught between her art, her stupid husband, and her hypocritical uncle, she made me want to jump into the pages and help her straighten everything out. (That's saying a lot coming from me, a generally unsympathetic person and least of all to other ...more
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Liz
04/05/08

I started and stopped reading this book about 20 times. Eventually, maybe about 100 pages in, I decided to forget about it. The whole thing with the inanimate objects just turned me off, and I felt like the story itself with Ellen Cherry Charles just seemed to be dragging on, nothing interesting was happing anymore. I guess I was looking for more action.

But, I spoke to a friend who's also a Tom Robbins lover, and he couldn't believe I had put the book down. He told me that his take on Rob...more
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Mike
Mike rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
07/27/07

Read in February, 2007
I started this book at least three times. Tom Robbins is one of my favorie authors, and this was his only novel I hadn't read. However, each of the times I started it I found myself becoming very disappointed. At the beginning it was too weird, or trying to be too cute, even for Tom Robbins. Ellen Cherry and Boomer driving across country in a turkey. A talking and walking spoon, dirty sock and can of beans. It was too much. I couldn't take it seriously. He was trying to be too 'Tom Robbi...more
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Bill
07/08/08

bookshelves: to-reread
With the possible exception of "Jitterbug Perfume" (I can never decide which is my favorite), Tom Robbins has never been better than this, and that is saying a lot! Politically charged, hilarious, irreverent, brilliantly insightful... I can't say enough good things about this book. The cast of characters is irresistible, from Ellen Cherry Charles to Salome to can o' beans, red stick, and dirty sock, to the performance artist whose name I can never remember (it's "Turnaround... som...more
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Jen
09/03/07

Read in September, 2007
recommends it for: smart, progressive types with a sense of humor
Tom Robbins is a genius. His use of the English language is so playful and dangerously intelligent that I can't belive he isn't a bigger literary celebrity.

Skinny Legs and All delves into all of life's big issues: religion, politics, love, war, money and so on, though it has a light touch; main characters include a Can 'o Beans and a Dirty Sock, for example. Seven fundamental truths are revealed as a modern day belly dancer named Salome dances The Dance of the Seven Veils - a veil drops, an...more
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Mason
01/30/08

Read in February, 2007
recommends it for: open minded people who like to think and laugh
The story of artist/waitress Ellen Cherry Charles and her husband, redneck/welder/accidental artist, Boomer Petway. Also, we hear from Buddy Winkler, Ellen’s uncle, a southern preacher who is cooking up some sort of scheme for the end of the world. And then there is the crew of inanimate objects: Painted Stick, Conch Shell, Dirty Sock, Spoon and Can ‘o Beans who are on a spiritual quest of their own. Add to that Spike and Abu, a Jew and a Muslim, who have opened “Isaac and Ismael’s,” a...more
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Rachael
Rachael rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
08/25/07

Read in August, 2007
So I finally finished this book. It turned out to be better than I was expecting it to be. I enjoyed it much more than Robbins' other book I've read: Still Life With Woodpecker. I'm not rushing off to read more by him, but I might try another at a later date.

I found his discussion of art and the market insightful, as was his discussion of the situation in Israel/Palestine (though having been published in 1990 it is both a little out of date, and disturbingly still accurate). For a rath...more
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Heather
Read in February, 2008
recommends it for: eccentrics
I am a Tom Robbins fan, but I was a little disappointed in this book. Fierce Invalids is still my all-time favorite, closely followed by Jitterbug Perfume. Both are MUST-reads.

My whole theory on how Tom Robbins writes a book:
--step 1: find some random unlikely stuff to be associated-- people, places, things, or topics.
--step 2: weave them together using witty humour, a renegade main character, some sort of historical or theological revelation tied into all random people places or things....more
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Mohrmohrs
who would have thought that someone like me, who is quite a literalist, would have enjoyed a book about a traveling spoon, dirty sock, stick and shell! Tom Robbins is quite a creative fellow! What an imagination and what a great way with words and wit he has! I loved the goofy ways he found of saying things. I loved the characters--the fantastic 'inanimates' as well as the actual people. so amusing....
Robbins'point in writing this book, I imagine, was to help the reader to arrive at the s...more
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Alina
07/05/08

I enjoyed just about everything about this book, primarily Robbins' use of language. As an artist, I delighted in the characters' musings about the art world. At first I was put off by the use of inanimate objects in the plot, but with time even this grew on me.

However, there was something about the main premise, Salome's Dance of the Seven Veils and how it was supposed to tie the whole piece together, that was painfully contrived. Anytime it came into play, Robbins suddenly took on a pre...more
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John
08/04/08

Read in August, 2008
recommended to John by: Rene Ng
I just finished Skinny Legs and All. It was GREAT. I have to read the last 20 pages again to absorb all the veils and content there, I'd like to read the whole thing again down the line, and am interested in his other books as well. I really liked the four main characters Boomer, Ellen Cherry, Abu, and Spike (Buddy the minister I didn't like so much)...thought all the stuff about marriage, religion, art, was all so well written and really insightful. I really disliked the inanimate objects, ...more
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Cat
07/10/08

Read in July, 2008
I would love to see the plot outline for this book. I'm really curious about how Tom Robbins goes about crafting his stories.

This work is particularly intricate and detailed. Robbins piles on layer after layer of ancient history. He visits Jerusalem throughout the centuries at the same time he explores the fictional life of Ellen Cherry Charles, a starving artist hungry for everything but food.

He goes so far as to create a second plot which follows the lives of five formerly inanimate...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.99 (6706 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.96 (1181 ratings)
number of reviews: 455






other editions

Skinny Legs and All (Paperback)
Skinny Legs and All (Hardcover)
Skinny Legs and All (Mass Market Paperback)