IT'S NOT EASY BEING A JEWISH SEX SYMBOL: Romantic Poetry From Sharon's Ardent Fan Club
A once-in-a-lifetime poetry collection - written not by the author, but by the people who adored her.
For more than two decades, Sharon Esther Lampert has inspired poets, professors, philosophers, artists, rabbis, doctors, and admirers from around the world. Her brilliance, beauty, charisma, and creative genius sparked an outpouring of heartfelt, humorous, romantic, and deeply personal poems - all written to her and about her.
This book gathers those poems into a single, unforgettable volume: a living archive of admiration, devotion, and artistic tribute.
Drawn from fan letters, love notes, emails, handwritten poems, and decades of correspondence, this collection reveals how profoundly Sharon has touched the lives of others. As one admirer wrote:
"Miss Sharon is the essence, and epitome of Love."
Another wrote with awe:
"You are unambiguously very interesting... you must be what I call a person gifted "
Inside this book, readers will discover:
Romantic poems written by men who fell in love with her mind, her beauty, and her soulFan tributes that celebrate Sharon as a poet, philosopher, prophet, prodigy, and "Sexiest Creative Genius in Human History"Love letters filled with longing, admiration, humor, and emotional honestyPoetic portraits that capture Sharon through the eyes of those who saw her as a musePin-up photography and fan-submitted images that became part of her cultural legendA rare glimpse into the emotional impact Sharon has had on people across generationsThis is not a typical poetry book. It is a mirror of influence, a testament to charisma, and a celebration of the creative spark Sharon ignites in others.
Whether tender, passionate, playful, or reverent, every poem in this collection reveals a different facet of how people experienced her - as a muse, a mystery, a queen, a genius, a beauty, and a force of nature.
IT'S NOT EASY BEING A JEWISH SEX SYMBOL is a tribute to the woman who inspired it - a woman whose presence alone moved others to poetry.