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Snoop: What Your Stuff Says About You (Unabridged)

Snoop: What Your Stuff Says About You (Unabridged)

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Author: Sam Gosling
Publisher: audible.com
Category: Book

List Price: $21.95
Buy New: $11.52
You Save: $10.43 (48%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 22 reviews

Media: Audio Download

ASIN: B001BSJHQS

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Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Snoop: What Your Stuff Says About You
  • Kindle Edition - Snoop: What Your Stuff Says About You

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Does what’s on your desk reveal what’s on your mind? Do those pictures on your walls tell true tales about you? And is your favorite outfit about to give you away? For the last ten years psychologist Sam Gosling has been studying how people project (and protect) their inner selves. By exploring our private worlds (desks, bedrooms, even our clothes and our cars), he shows not only how we showcase our personalities in unexpected-and unplanned-ways, but also how we create personality in the first place, communicate it others, and interpret the world around us. Gosling, one of the field’s most innovative researchers, dispatches teams of scientific snoops to poke around dorm rooms and offices, to see what can be learned about people simply from looking at their stuff. What he has discovered is astonishing: when it comes to the most essential components of our personalities-from friendliness to flexibility-the things we own and the way we arrange them often say more about us than even our most intimate conversations. If you know what to look for, you can figure out how reliable a new boyfriend is by peeking into his medicine cabinet or whether an employee is committed to her job by analyzing her cubicle. Bottom line: The insights we gain can boost our understanding of ourselves and sharpen our perceptions of others. Packed with original research and fascinating stories, Snoop is a captivating guidebook to our not-so-secret lives.



Customer Reviews:   Read 17 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Droll, thought-provoking psychological exercise   November 12, 2008
Sam Gosling's book is an anti-materialist's nightmare--or is it? In a time when many are advocating that we "purge" our possessions and live "simpler" lives, "Snoop" is an amusing, clever, and occasionally unnerving brain teaser. It posits that we are, in fact, our stuff, and everything we wear, hang, collect, listen to, display, etc. says something revealing about us. (Even the way people arrange pictures in an office--facing a guest so as to impress, or facing the owner to provide reassurance/emotional nurturance--is significant.) Occasionally the book gets fairly scientific when measuring various psychological qualities (Neuroticism, Openness, etc.), but it's nothing that will throw anyone who's ever taken a Meyers-Briggs test. Gosling also analyzes "hoarders" and "emotional narcissists" who never throw anything away, and his conclusions are thought-provoking. And the charts analyzing different music listeners (gospel, rap, rock, etc.), and folks' stereotypes about these people based on their music choices, are real eye-openers. If anything, the book is too short; another chapter or two would've been pure gravy, especially if it dealt with the current trend of disposability, or "renting" rather than owning (as in people who only take CD's or DVD's out from the library rather than buying them). Some may also find the tone a bit facile, though I thought it was funny and clever (especially a chapter entitled "Knowing Me Knowing You" with several pointed ABBA jokes). Still, after I read this book, I couldn't walk into any room in my home without casting a critical eye at the art, the knick-knacks, the books, etc. It's the sort of book that may genuinely change the way you see yourself, as well as the world around you.


5 out of 5 stars Fun, entertaining, and interesting   November 7, 2008
As a Professional Organizer, I have learned from being in hundreds of homes that I can quickly size up a lot about the person I am working with from their "stuff." It helps me do a better job for the client. Reading Dr. Gosling's book was a "Wow, I always thought that too!" kind of experience and was a fascinating look into the reasons why I knew what I knew. Great read!


1 out of 5 stars almost not worth reviewing   October 17, 2008
 0 out of 3 found this review helpful

This book was so worthless it's pretty much a waste of time writing the review, but I had to because the author come off as so full of himself, it made me a little bit angry... like having been conned. I was sold on the title and the idea but the book did not deliver. Rather than getting to his thesis, the author spends entire chapters talking about how cool it is that he's a consultant for a show on MTV.

The word that came to mind as I read was "pseudo-science:" it looks vaguely similar to science, but it's not. Everything was so flimsy in terms of theory and anything Gosling delivers is just a poor, warmed-over helping of a review of the literature, and not well written at that. What he seems to do is attempt to pull-together disparate ideas and journal articles to build a cobbled-together sort of theory that he never quite gets around to spelling out.

Save your money, save your time. I can't even believe this got published. What was his editor thinking?



2 out of 5 stars A Little Disappointing   September 29, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

After hearing the author speak on local radio in New Zeland, I was intereted enough to purchase this book. After all, who wouldn't want to be able to look into the bathroom of a partner and gain some insights into her soul? Although I enjoyed the first quarter to a half of this book where the author takes the reader on a tour of personality types and classifications and offers some easy to use self-diagnostic checks, I became disinterested with the second half.

The reason for my wandering attention was because the book failed to deliver. In trying to be complete in providing an analytical process, I found the author providing riddles within enigmas. OK, you can't draw quick conclusions, and there may be blind alleys and misleading information in a person's cubicle, but the book would still have benefited from an easier step by step guide as at least an overview. I got lost in so much hedging that in the end I feel little of the information provided was practical.

After all if you need a phd in psychology to snoop on a quick trip to a friend's bathroom, then it might be easier to have them sit a Myers-Briggs test.

After great promise, a little dissapointing.



5 out of 5 stars how too look inside a person   September 24, 2008
The beauty of Snoop is the enormous amount of research covered and insights one can gain in such an easy to read book. Unlike many psychology related books, Snoop is applicable and action oriented. Not only do you gain theoretical perspective the reader is also in essence, being "trained" to take note of his or her personal surroundings and of those around them and to make sense of the story these artifacts have written on the wall. This body of knowledge has a multitude of applications. Whether you are interested in what your rebellious son's messy room, yet meticulous music collection has to say about him or as a manager, what your employees office space reveals about them, you can gain that knowledge by reading Snoop. Most of us strive to gain a better understanding of who we are and of those we call family and friends, Snoop is here to help.

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