The book is a bit dated now as the author’s research was conducted almost 30 years ago. The models interviewed were all from the Pacific Northwest so time and location plays a big part in the views expressed. The book itself begins with quite an academic history of the relationship of the life model to art.
The books earns 4 stars, however, simply because it covers a subject that, even to this day, there is very little information about and the interviews with the models are interesting. Without a better resource available, this ends up being a worthwhile read for anyone curious about figure modeling.
As someone who hires a lot of models for figure drawing, I thought this gave invaluable insight into their thoughts and the modeling process. I was surprised at how rich a topic it is for examination.
The writing was more academic than I usually like, but the frequent quotes from models broke it up well.
The only suggestion is that it could use an updated edition. It says it was first published in 2006 but the text seems more like 1996.
Good: * Very good coverage on everything about life modelling from the pay to handling pain.
Bad: * I'm still quite unsure if life modelling is an "acceptable" work. It seems that some of the interviewed models are doing mental gymnastics to justify their work.