by Rachel Johnson ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 3, 2007
A tasty look at the price of excess.
Lifestyles of the very rich and morally ambivalent, from Johnson (The Mummy Diaries, 2004, etc.).
Notting Hill is home to many of London’s hyper-wealthy families. By and large, these status-hungry multi-millionaires have made their money in banking. And being of the competitive sort, they love to flaunt their success. Clare and Mimi are two middle-aged women deeply invested in the Notting Hill community. Mimi is a harried wife and mother of three. She and her husband inherited their home, and they don’t quite mesh with their new, ostentatious neighbors. Mimi’s a horrendous housekeeper and has to work part-time to keep her family solvent. Clare, though, maintains a fastidious home—all shining steel and gleaning marble—with a limitless budget and plenty of time on her hands. Clare fills her days with New Age therapies and obsesses about her inability to conceive. Beneath their disparate exteriors, Mimi and Clare share two traits: They are relentless busybodies, and they are consumed by envy. Mimi lusts after the trappings of wealth (the cars, the country homes, the support staffs) of her neighbors. Clare pines for a family of her own and covets her neighbors’ children. Both Clare and Mimi take misguided paths to satisfy their cravings. In this modern morality tale, in which women strive for perfect bodies, maintain camera-ready homes and cultivate their offspring to replicate their twisted vision of success, salvation lies in shunning extravagance and breaking from the fold.
A tasty look at the price of excess.Pub Date: April 3, 2007
ISBN: 1-4165-3176-9
Page Count: 352
Publisher: N/A
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2007
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by Debbie Macomber ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 8, 2013
Typical Macomber holiday romantic fare: short and sweet and as much a part of the season for some readers as cookies and...
Chicago society-page columnist Carrie Slayton wants to find and interview reclusive author Finn Dalton to prove her credibility as a real journalist; she doesn’t expect to fall in love with him, jeopardizing both her heart and her career.
Carrie Slayton yearns to write meatier stories, and her editor offers her a challenge: find and interview best-selling, reclusive author Finn Dalton, and she can have her pick of assignments. Determined, Carrie makes real progress, tracking down his birth certificate, then his mother, then the man himself. Basically drop-shipped by an Alaskan bush pilot to his cabin’s doorstep, she is met by an angry author and an Arctic blizzard. Finn may be crotchety, but he’s not inhumane, and he can hardly leave her outside in the snow. As the two get to know each other, they realize they may have more in common than either expected, and despite their icy beginnings, they warm up to each other. After two snowbound days, Carrie heads back to Chicago and her job, but neither Carrie nor Finn is ready to say goodbye, and the two begin a long-distance romance. Meanwhile, despite enough material to write a story, Carrie buries the piece, believing Finn’s trust in her is more valuable than any article. The two are stuck on each other, but the people around them are more worried about their differences than their similarities, and they’ll either have to figure out a way to be together or end it completely. Set in snowy Alaska, Chicago and Seattle during the Christmas season, Macomber fulfills fans’ expectations with this romantic holiday confection. As with many Macomber books, the pace is relaxed, the story soft and fuzzy. Certain details miss the mark, and sometimes the story feels told more than shown, but the author will likely enthrall her usual audience with this quick, simple love story of two opposites attracting and struggling to make it work.
Typical Macomber holiday romantic fare: short and sweet and as much a part of the season for some readers as cookies and candy canes.Pub Date: Oct. 8, 2013
ISBN: 978-0-345-52889-6
Page Count: 256
Publisher: Ballantine
Review Posted Online: July 6, 2013
Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2013
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by Megan Walker ‧ RELEASE DATE: April 7, 2020
A sweet, somewhat engaging Regency romance hindered by exasperating character choices.
A young woman in desperate straits hopes a house party will find her sister a happy match with their host, but she doesn’t expect to fall in love herself.
After the death of their mother, Clara and Amelia Moore are left in the begrudging and belligerent care of their stepfather, Lord Gray, whose health is failing. The sisters’ future is precarious, since he’s informed Amelia that once he’s died, his family won’t support them. Their hopes rise when Sir Ronald Demsworth—Clara's would-be suitor from their recent season—invites them to a house party. Amelia keeps their dire situation from her sister, hopeful things will turn out. A match between Clara and Sir Ronald looks promising, but Georgiana Wood, another guest, seems set on Sir Ronald herself, and her brother, Peter, is doing everything he can to help his sister win their host's regard. In order to keep each other from interfering, Clara and Peter agree to spend more time together, yet as an attraction grows between them, Georgiana’s behavior toward Ronald becomes increasingly assuming, putting Amelia’s friendship with Peter at odds with her support for her sister. When an opportunity arises for Amelia to make a good but loveless match, she must decide between security and love, especially once Georgiana goes too far and risks everyone’s happiness. Austen-esque themes abound in this historical romance of manners and masks, yet Amelia’s first-person narrative undermines her character, since she’s continually justifying her decisions and then changing her mind or her behavior a few pages later, while the absolute lack of communication among the characters is frustrating.
A sweet, somewhat engaging Regency romance hindered by exasperating character choices.Pub Date: April 7, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-62972-734-9
Page Count: 320
Publisher: Shadow Mountain
Review Posted Online: Jan. 26, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 15, 2020
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