Sex, Lies, and Handwriting: A Top Expert Reveals the Secrets Hidden in Your Handwriting

BUY FROM AMAZON.COM
Price: $9.36

Usually ships in 24 hours

By: Michelle Dresbold
(47 customer reviews)
Buy New: $9.36


Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

EDITORIAL REVIEW

Have you ever looked at someone and thought:

He looks honest.

She seems friendly.

He doesn't look like a serial killer.


Are you always right?




Looks can be deceiving, but handwriting never lies. Handwriting profiling is an amazingly accurate tool for assessing how people think, feel, and act. In fact, handwriting profiling is so accurate that the FBI, the CIA, and the Israeli intelligence agency Mossad use it to build detailed psychological profiles of some of the world's most dangerous individuals. And thousands of major corporations use handwriting profiling to help them make the right hiring decisions.

Handwriting expert Michelle Dresbold -- the only civilian to be invited to the United States Secret Service's Advanced Document Examination training program -- draws on her extensive experience helping law enforcement agencies around the country on cases involving kidnapping, arson, forgery, murder, embezzlement, and stalking to take us inside the mysterious world of crossed t's and dotted i's.

In Sex, Lies, and Handwriting, Dresbold explains how a single sentence can provide insight into a person's background, psychology, and behavior. Throughout the book, Dresbold explores the handwriting of sly politicians, convicted criminals, notorious killers, suspected cheats, and ordinary people who've written to Dresbold's "The Handwriting Doctor" column for help. She shows you how to identify the signs of a dirty rotten scoundrel and a lying, cheating, backstabbing lover. And she introduces you to some of the most dangerous traits in handwriting, including weapon-shaped letters, "shark's teeth," "club strokes," and "felon's claws." (When you see these traits in someone's script, she says, "it's time to stop reading and start running!")

Dresbold also explains how criminals are tracked through handwritten clues and what spouses, friends, or employees might be hiding in their script.

Finally, Dresbold re-examines the handwriting evidence in several notorious unsolved cases. She uncovers fascinating clues that reveal the secret side of Lizzie Borden, acquitted of the ax murder of her parents in 1893's "trial of the century." Dresbold also reveals astonishing details about the author of the JonBenÉt Ramsey ransom note, and she presents startling new evidence that exposes the real Jack the Ripper (contrary to popular theories, he wasn't a prince or a painter after all).

Sex, Lies, and Handwriting will have you paying a bit more attention to your -- and everyone else's -- penmanship.

PRODUCT DETAILS

Publisher: Free Press
Pub. Date: 22nd July 2008
Catalog: Book
Media: Paperback
Number Of Pages: 304
Ean: 9780743288101
Isbn: 0743288106

ABOUT THIS BOOK

USER REVIEWS

This book is for everyone!
~ Written on Nov 18, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

If you are curious about what your handwriting says about you, buy this book! A person's handwriting, or brain print, says a great deal about him or her. And Michelle Dresbold's bona fides in handwriting analysis are well demonstrated in Sex, Lies, and Handwriting. At the same time you will learn what their handwriting says about some of history's most fascinating, and in many cases, most notorious individuals. And, you will gain new insights into the unsolved mysteries surrounding Jack the Ripper and JonBenet Ramsey through the author's handwriting analysis of those involved.
I also attended a lecture by the author, which was equally fascinating. Buy this book for yourself, your friends or your book club. You will be happy you did.

I Absolutely Love this Book!
~ Written on Nov 3, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

"Sex, Lies and Handwriting" is riveting. It is well-researched and highly-entertaining. Everything is well explained and illustrated. It is so much fun that you just don't want to be interrupted while you're reading! I particularly liked the way Michelle Dresbold combines the analysis of famous, infamous and not so famous people's handwriting. This, to me, makes the author even more credible. Her success and reputation speak volumes."

Sex, Lies and Handwriting
~ Written on Sep 12, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

I have studied graphology for over ten years and this book covers some juicy tidbits. It is well-written and covers the basic concepts of handwriting profiling. When you "get the hang" of how to read people's handwriting, you will learn, observe, and even stop reading and start running! You need to know who is a scoundrel, a dictator, a sabotager, and be able to pick out those folks that are just plain bad to the bone. It is all about Brainwriting 101 and how we learned to write "our signature" in grade school. The book keeps you reading and you definitely will be learning information to help you make the educated decisions when it comes to who to hang with or not. The pen or pencil may do the writing, but in the end, it all comes through the brain. I recommend this book at five stars!

A Must Read
~ Written on Aug 17, 2009. out of users found this review helpful.

You guys would not believe how cool this book is. I thought handwriting analysis was rubbish but now realize how handwriting is a direct link to one's thoughts. Author Michelle Dresbold does analysis for the Secret Service and police departments throughout the U.S. In her new book she teaches her tricks to laypeople in an entertaining and provocative way. The book is fascinating and her assessments accurate. A great read.

The Write to Remain Silent
~ Written on Apr 24, 2009. 1 out of 1 users found this review helpful.

If eyes are the windows to the soul, perhaps handwriting is the soul's indictment. Michelle Dresbold leaves no "i" undotted or "t" uncrossed as she fills the table with evidence based on the discerning tools of her trade. Skepticism gives way to fascination upon discovering the often stunning profiles embedded in a person's cursive imprint, the result of a science known as "handwriting analysis."

The author begins the process by trifurcating a letter into zones, and explaining the significance of each: upper (cerebral), middle (the here and now - balanced - and vital organs), and lower (physical appetites, including sexual desires). When she applies this method to various handwriting exhibits of famous and non-famous people alike, the effects are astonishing, like the flourescent glow of blood revealed under luminol.

Dresbold suggests that Scott Peterson's confusing scrawl of written characters with ambiguous identities might have helped condemn him long before a jury did. Surprising, too, is the personality clue possibly wrapped inside the curls and flourishes of hatchet murderer, Lizzie Borden's, handwriting.

Ted Bundy's tendency to let the lower zones of his letters invade the space of the words written on the lines below them indicates an inability to stay within sexual boundaries. Along those same lines, the author uncovers the literal cloak and dagger messages sometimes concealed in a letter's lower zones. Equally curious comes the news that a large, loopy lower zone registers a "ten" on the sexual-interest scale.

Page after page, the secrets of the scribes unfold, such as the dark side of those little check-mark strokes that some writers use to begin words. Also, strong emotions may be hiding in the corners of letters fashioned from sharp angles and lines.

"Sex, Lies and Handwriting" is well-researched and comprehensive on two levels: 1) the discussion of individual components of handwriting examination; and 2) the stories within the story, each sketch concluding with an informal profile that corresponds with a particular politician, celebrity, notorious killer, criminal or maybe even the boy next door. Michelle Dresbold's book has earned a conspicuous place in my library as I am sure I'll be referring to it in the years to come.

SIMILAR ITEMS:

Search:
International
UK US
Browse Categories