StarAstrologer - Books : The Art of Mingling: Proven Techniques for Mastering Any Room
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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 158.27
EAN: 9780312354312
ISBN: 0312354312
Label: St. Martin's Griffin
Manufacturer: St. Martin's Griffin
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 208
Publication Date: October 31, 2006
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
Release Date: October 31, 2006
Sales Rank: 2913
Studio: St. Martin's Griffin
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Editorial Review:
Product Description:
Does the idea of going to a large party make your palms sweat and your mouth go dry? You are not alone. Many people suffer from minglephobia, a secret terror of large parties. Jeanne Martinet’s tried-and-true cure is her unique system of techniques and strategies for overcoming social fears. Now you can relax and thrive at any business or social event! Updated with dozens of brand-new field-tested tricks, tips, lines, and maneuvers, The Art of Mingling will teach you: * Basic Survival Fantasies for the Truly Terrified * The Flattery Entree * The Fade In (and the Fade Out) * The Human Sacrifice * The Cell-Out * The Hors D’Oeuvre Maneuver * The Dot-Dot-Dot Plot * The Quotation Device * The Quick Change * The Faux Pas Moi * And much, much more!
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
Jean Martinet has written an entertaining book on techniques for improving one's everyday interactions in the setting of social gatherings. Martinet provides suggestions on everything from joining a group of strangers, to recovering from the embarrassing faux pas, to fleeing encounters with the obnoxious and boring. "Mingling" is a good complement to "How to Work a Room" by Susan Roane. While Roane focuses more on the etiquette of business interactions, Martinet aims at the brief, surface small talk ... Read More
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If you want to act like Phoebe from FRIENDS, then this is your bible. Otherwise, avoid it. The jist of this is lie, manipulate and generally behave like a ditzy deb. Oh, and it's utterly useless for even the most effeminate men. I honestly did not find even one thing in it's entirety that I could use, and as a business man and church security staff, I mingle constantly. If she ever got invited back to parties based on this behavior, it was probably for laffs.
Rating: -
Sure, the techniques are all proven; even the most dedicated introvert has learned most of these by college. If you're a fairly average person looking to improve your game, this isn't the place to go; you'll find nothing new. In fact, you'll find everything to be almost insultingly basic.
If you truly have a challenging time with almost any group social situation -- and I'm not putting anyone down here, that describes some of my friends, but it's not the average person or even the person ... Read More
Rating: -
this book was decent. it did have some funny stuff in it. but, i think being funny always helps ease situations where your uncomfortable in mingling. its worth it for some of the tips it gave. but, some or outdated/corny that you would look stupid nowdays if you used them. so, dont take everything verbatum
Rating: -
I liked the introduction, in which the author talked about her friends asking her how she had managed to talk to everyone at the event they had just been at, while they had failed to mingle. She does give a few useful tips in the book, but don't buy this book if mingling is not, for you, an end in itself, as it is for the author. If, for example, you want to improve your mingling skills in order to make friends, this book won't help at all. The book might help you learn to meet everyone in a room, spending ... Read More
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