Jake Kelly was a "hit man," a guy skilled in the seduction of beautiful women. He used his skills to bed as many women as possible, moving on as soon as he had what he wanted and assuming the women he slept with felt the same way. He was wrong.
One of Kelly's tried and true opening lines was claiming he needed to interview beautiful women for an upcoming book; ironically, it was this line of seduction that changed his life. He learned that, while hit men look for conquests, their targets long for deeper, more meaningful relationships. Equally interesting, he discovered women had little awareness of the techniques used by hit men, giving men a distinct advantage.
The Beautiful Woman Syndrome and the Invisible Man levels the playing field by teaching women how to differentiate between shallow hit men and the good guys-the ones willing to invest their time in an actual relationship. Kelly classifies eleven types of hit men and dissects their opening lines and tactics. In doing so, he gives women the power and knowledge necessary to meet such men on their own terms, and take control of their own sexuality.
About the Author: Now retired from practicing law, Jake Kelly (a pseudonym for Michael Antin) taught the tax seminar at the University of California, Berkeley, Boalt Hall School of Law through 2011. After retiring, Kelly was able to focus on his first love: music. .
Kelly conducted extensive interviews with beautiful women before writing the musical Sophia, which ran twice in New York and Los Angeles. Sophia was so popular that it inspired Kelly to write The Beautiful Woman Syndrome and the Invisible Man.
Kelly's next musical, Renewal, ran in New York, with plans for a Los Angeles run. His All Fall Down will open in New York and Los Angeles in the same year.