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Women's Fiction
Swerve: Reckless Observations of a Postmodern Girl

Swerve: Reckless Observations of a Postmodern Girl

List Price: $21.95
Your Price: $14.93
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Laugh out loud clever!
Review: Aisha Tyler has a strong and unique voice in her writing. Her genuineness and grounded perspective is what makes her humor so appealing to me. Her writing is unpretentious and honest. She rants about reality tv, unrealistic expectations, platonic relationships, dating, and sexism ( without going off on a feminist crazed rant ) to name just a few topics. She also explores the idea 'What is sexy?'.

This book was a funny, refreshing read. Highly recommended!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Disappointing
Review: I love Aisha Tyler. She is the funniest woman in showbiz! But, this book lacks depth. I could not wait to read this book. I am a late sleeper, and I watched Aisha on KUSI Channel 9 in San Diego in anticipation of her book! But it is not worthy of the genius bookwriters out there who deserve there credits. She bored me with her over annalyzing of everything. From a strong woman's stance, it made me feel like someone was telling how I shoud be cool. Aisha you are a intelligent and comical person. Please be less judgemental on the next book, and just let things flow. Love ya, Tamara

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Disappointing
Review: I love Aisha Tyler. She is the funniest woman in showbiz! But, this book lacks depth. I could not wait to read this book. I am a late sleeper, and I watched Aisha on KUSI Channel 9 in San Diego in anticipation of her book! But it is not worthy of the genius bookwriters out there who deserve there credits. She bored me with her over annalyzing of everything. From a strong woman's stance, it made me feel like someone was telling how I shoud be cool. Aisha you are a intelligent and comical person. Please be less judgemental on the next book, and just let things flow. Love ya, Tamara

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: SWERVE AWAAAAAAY FROM THIS BOOK
Review: I'm all for witty chicks, for I am one myself but this book I had to MAKE myself read and I simply could not complete it. This is the most boring book I've picked up in a VERY LONG TIME. I've read 4 other books while trying to finish Swerve and I just give up!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Fun
Review: Reading this book is like having a conversation with your best girlriend. To some this may be quite abnoxious, but to others it is quite refreshing. The book is quirky, which is not surprising being that the author herself is quirky. There are random refrences, roundabout points, and side conversations with the reader. All these things make the book fun. "Fun" being the operative word. You can't take this book too seriously. The whole aim of the book is to tackle some fairly heavy, slightly mundane issues in a lighthearted way. The topics addressed are conversations shared amongst girlfriends. In conversations with our best friends we make roundaabout points, we go off on tangents, and we make random interjections. This book parallels the dynamics of such conversations. One of the elements of the book that I found most endearing was Tyler's ability to make complex allegorical comparisons without losing the reader. Tyler also interjects some amusing language and "conversation" throughout the book. Making the book more like a tête-à-tête or heart-to-heart. The book is truly an amalgamation. That is why Ms. Tyler found it difficult to describe the book in the introduction. This book cannot be described. To some this is a dreadful proposition. To me it is refreshing.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: ANYONE THAT DOESN'T LIKE THIS BOOK, LACKS A SENSE OF HUMOR!
Review: This book is totally what society needs right now! IT IS A LAUGH OUT LOUD IN PUBLIC type of book. Aisha makes some serious points about real life situation, and gives real life opinions on how one "could" handle them. And every real issue doesn't have to have a "really" serious after responce. But some people are to serious about life and they fall victim to things they just really have no controll over. So those people need another way of looking at life, a comedic view of the world.
But most of all, persons reading this book have to take it as it is, A DANG GOOD TIME! It's not "Origins of Species" by: Charles Darwin. It's not suppose to change the literary world. It is what it is. Humor in it's most intelligent form. And it doesn't hurt that it's coming from a sophisticated young black woman either. ;)

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Andy Rooney in the 80s was funnier
Review: This book was not good at all and I am glad I rented it from the library instead of purchasing it. I totally agree with one of the reviewers that said she rushed when she was writing the book. She had some good topics but they were not presented well in the book. Well hopefully Mrs. Tyler, would have a better book next time around.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The musings of a postmodern girl
Review: Too hip to be existential but filled with age old truths, SWERVE by Aisha Tyler
is a commentary on maintaining a sense of self while trying to weather the
often cold dating climate. It is packed with clever anecdotes, personal
accounts, and common sense rules for preserving dignity in the face of trying
to hook the hot guy at the end of the bar without appearing to be a harlot.

Tyler begins with a basic definition of postmodernism and then she flips it
and tells what it means to her. She goes on to discuss how she doesn't know
if SWERVE is postmodern or not. She began writing it with the idea of sending
a helpful message to women. What she ended up with was a witty observation of
life, dating, and self-esteem. Her humorous slant on the subject matter keeps
it from being a self-help book, but her many descriptions and stories will
undoubtedly lead readers to identify with some characterizations in the book.

With chapters titled "The Ballad of The Yogurt Girl" and "The War of Art, or
Aiken v. Studdard in the World Series of Love", Tyler is entertaining and
truthful in her depictions of people at work and at play. Many times the
chapters read like a conversation that Tyler was having with a friend - one
that started off on one subject, but ended up somewhere else entirely - and it
still managed to hold my attention. Where else can you find, in one chapter,
a discussion of people mimicking the personalities of Ruben Studdard and Clay
Aiken at a karoke bar and end up with a discussion of The Art War as it relates
to dating?

Using language that is spoken by those in their twenties, Tyler addresses issues
that have long been debated in sociology classes and in bars throughout the
country. How does a girl land a hot guy, beat out the competition and maintain
her dignity? What does a woman do when she has made a fool of herself during
her quest for a man? These as well as a multitude of other topics are
among those touched on by Tyler. Her underlying message is to be yourself in
the face of any dating or social disaster and all will be fine in the
end. Regardless of the subject that Tyler flows to, she is entertaining and
has put together a book that is simply fun and amusing.

Reviewed by Diane Marbury
of The RAWSISTAZ Reviewers


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