By Shawn Macomber on 6.30.04 @ 12:05AM
For the girl who has everything and wants more.
The Gift Giving Handbook For the Inept Man
by Timothy B. Schnabel
(Shanem Publishing, 206 pages, $12.95)
Love may be grand, but shopping for that love is hell. Buying gifts
for my fiancée is literally a painful, retching experience,
with occasional chest pains thrown in. I pick up and discard
hundreds of items, spend hours searching for the gift without peer
-- the Platonic Gift for The Ages -- and then, of course, I just go
ahead and buy the Pixies CD or the new Candace Bushnell novel I
first looked at. Which, it turns out, is what she wanted in the
first place.
So it seemed like manna from heaven when a review copy of
Timothy B. Schnabel's The Gift Giving Handbook for the Inept
Man arrived at my apartment on the eve of my fiancée's
birthday. Rarely, I thought, has book been so aptly matched with
reader.
Alas, 200 pages later I had not been transformed from an "inept
man" into good gift-giving guy, but it was fun to find someone more
harried and paranoid than myself. The Gift Giving Handbook
won't help you with gift ideas unless you are a Unabomber-esque
I-fertilize-my-own-garden-and-never-come-out-of-the-woods social
misfit, but it will boost your self-esteem.
I don't know Schnabel's romantic history, but if his book is any
indication, it couldn't have been pretty. Some chapter titles:
"It's the Thought That Counts: Yeah, Right!," "Gifts That Make You
Look Stupid," and "Pitfalls, Booby Traps, and Landmines." The last
opens by explaining, "We must carefully maneuver around the booby
traps these so-called loving women create for us." (One wrong move
and...)
At one point, Schnabel asks, "How many men buy gifts for their
wives and girlfriends and hear phrases like, 'Why did you think I
would like this?' or 'Who were you thinking of when you bought
this?' or, my favorite, 'This is great. Did you keep the
receipt?'"
I've got news for you, Tim: Nobody hears that. Who are you
dating, Medusa? The girl from Play Misty for Me? Most
women receive even misguided gifts with some degree of warmth and
appreciation, but it sounds like Schnabel's significant other pulls
out a rolled up newspaper and rubs his nose in it when he's off
target.
"It does not matter that your intentions were good," he writes.
"It does not matter that you are a loving, caring human being who
would rather die than hurt her feelings. It does not even matter
that she asked you for it. Your timing was off and that is all she
needs to make your life a living hell for the next few hours."
Then again, Schnabel does seem to be particularly horrendous
gift-giver. For example, one wonders what kind of gift faux
pas he's made himself when writing about what constitutes an
"inappropriate" gift: "It could be anything," he writes. "A
personal hygiene item, cleaning supplies, a toilet seat..." I've
looked at many potentially stupid gifts in my time, but I never,
ever thought to myself, "I don't know what could possibly say I
love you better than a toilet seat. Oh, but wait, I haven't been
down the Tampax aisle yet."
Schnabel also encourages men to buy women adventures to exotic
locales. He provides a checklist for your sweetie to mark the
places she would most like to visit -- Afghanistan, Iraq,
Bosnia-Herzegovina, Liberia, and Sierra Leone are all provided as
potential "adventures," which I suppose is technically accurate.
But if my girlfriend wanted to go to Liberia for her birthday, I'd
get her a plane ticket, a phone card, a life insurance policy, and
a couple of disposable cameras. And of course I'd give her a
good-bye kiss at the airport..
"Even if she hates the entire experience," Schnabel writes, "she
will get a kick out of embarrassing you by telling the story over
and over to your friends." Just think of how many hilarious stories
you've heard that begin with, "So I walk into this mosque in Kabul,
and the Imam says to me, 'Hey infidel, is your refrigerator
running?'"
As a gift guru, Schnabel is a glutton for punishment. The last
50 pages of the book consist of more checklists of gifts ideas.
Consider the following sampling: classes at clown school; an
Ultrasonic bug and rodent repeller; a submersible bag; acids (?!);
medieval catapult; fart machine; animal heads; a suit of armor; a
life-size chess set; night vision goggles; an escape chain ladder;
gas mask (see "fart machine" above); animal traps; and anti-snoring
strips. Gun locks appear no fewer than three times.
Still wondering how this guy gets himself in trouble? Try this
on for size. In the "Gifts During Tragedies" chapter, Schnabel says
that the perfect boyfriend would handle his girlfriend breaking her
leg on a ski trip by buying her a bottle of wine, a long a
backscratcher, and a book entitled, Skiing Basics for
Simpletons.
"She may feign anger," he writes, but she will "also get mileage
out of it for years as she tells the story of your unsympathetic
attitude over and over to her friends." The Gift Giving
Handbook for the Inept Man might be better christened, How
to Test the Love and Patience of Your Significant Other.
Granted, sending the love of your life to clown school is a novel
idea, but that doesn't make it a good one.
topics:
Iraq, Oil