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Book Review: Straight Up and Dirty, by Stephanie Klein

6th April 2009 By Julianne Leave a Comment

When I was given this book, I had never heard of the author and hadn’t read any press releases. Nobody said a thing about it within my hearing. So all I had to go on was the name. “Straight Up and Dirty”. I cringed. I’d never found sex memoirs appealing, and I could just imagine what lurked between the covers. I anticipated jaw-dropping detail, so elaborate I’d get bored and watch the news instead that evening.

However, I read it all the way through, and at the end I felt somewhat short-changed. This book is not dirty. Whoever came up with the title has a really low smut threshold. It’s not all that straight-up either, and I don’t think it says anything new about relationships.

Although it wasn’t a bad read, and I did make it through to the end without getting bored, there was just nothing standout about it, nothing to really make it worth my time. It’s not difficult to read, and can be enjoyable in places, but overall it’s clichéd and doesn’t make any sort of interesting statement. The author jumps about when telling her story, and tries to be funny (calling her ex-husband “the wasband”), but ultimately falls flat. I found the ending to be vague and inconclusive. Klein dates some men, dates some more men, is miserable on and off, finally enrols in a photography class, and then stops being miserable and starts being contented, with no real explanation as to why or how. I would have found it much more interesting if she’d charted how her self-satisfaction started to improve, and included some reflection on it. It’s alright for what it is, but I saw potential in it for more.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: blogging celebrity, book review, books, inaccurate titles, memoir, personal transformation

Book Review: Girl on the Platform, by Josephine Cox

9th March 2009 By Julianne Leave a Comment

The only good thing about this book is how quickly it is over.

The story focuses on best mates Mark and Pete who go to London for a night out. At the station they begin their journey at, Pete sees a sad-looking girl on the opposite platform, and quickly becomes obsessed with the idea of finding out who she is and helping her. On the way to London the men realise that they won’t have enough time to visit any nightclubs after the theatre show they have tickets for if they have to catch the last train home, so they find a hostel, run by Leila, the stereotypical “feisty” landlady. The London section is well paced and funny, and gives enough background info about Mark and Pete to make them sympathetic, but once they go back home the book deteriorates so quickly it’s almost beyond belief! The rest of this review will contain spoilers, but the book really isn’t good enough for you to be concerned about having the ending spoiled.

The following few months are rushed through, Pete becoming more and more obsessed with the girl he saw on the platform, seeing her again and eventually coming up with a plan to meet her and get her to like him. A normal, non-creepy version of this scenario would involve Pete asking her out on a date, etc, but instead he gets manipulative and after finding out her dog has recently died he buys a puppy which he then pretends he found abandoned – I imagine the reader is supposed to be thinking “Aaaww, puppy” but I was distracted by the fact that he was building their relationship on a basis of lies! I was looking forward to seeing how they’d resolve things once he told her what he’d done to get her to date him, but then the book jumps to six weeks later, when they become engaged, and he has yet to tell her the truth. I’m sure if they were real people she would be pretty confused if not completely horrified when finding out the truth after so long and such a big commitment, even though his lies hurt no-one, they were pretty big lies, but the author doesn’t deal with her reaction at all and just skips past Pete’s thoughts that he must tell his fiancée the truth through to the wedding party in the next paragraph.

On the upside, it does what it says on the cover, it is a quick read – I read the whole thing on a train journey from Edinburgh to London – and is only £1.99. But I get the impression this book was intended for people who don’t read very often in a patronising sort of way – the plot is so simplistic it’s insulting to the intelligence of the reader. Reading this will not teach you anything, you may even find it frustrating, but at least it’s not long enough to get tedious!

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, books, DIRE, quick reads, review, romance

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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