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Single in Saudi |
List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $14.95 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
Rating: Summary: To reader from Wa. Review: There are those who write. Those that can't criticize. Perhaps the reader is jealous of Genia as she told her story as she lived it. Few women have had the adventures that Genia had. Perhaps she is not Danielle Steel with the help of editors who strip her story to fluff, but her story is real and true. Genia's story is truly her experience-if it is a testimony to her self-certeredness(not selfcerterness) as written by reader from Washington, the reader should just enjoy the story and not be over critical as Genia wrote of her true life in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
Rating: Summary: Over-sexed in Saudi Review: This book was a page turner - the descriptions of her experiences in the medical field in such a different country, her travels during off times, the people she met were very intriguing. I had just finished reading all of Jean Sasson's books on life in the royal family of Saudi Arabia and was eager to read of this author's "American girl" experience. The author seemed very competent and together in her two years there but I was totally turned off by her social life. Was she exaggerating the amount of alcohol and drugs she consumed along with her overly-abundant sex life?? This was a bit over the top and hard to believe a top-notch nurse could abuse her body like that and live to tell the story. Her respectability in the eyes of this reader regrettably took a downslide as the book progressed due to her seeming need for sexual daliances with most every male she encountered. Too bad.
Rating: Summary: Enough of semantic bickering Review: Well 'Engmajor' doesn't know what he/she is talking about either, because 'noceme' wrote "outweighs", not "outways". Outweigh is very much a word in the English language and it means "to exceed in weight, value or importance."
Rating: Summary: Ahem.... Review: Well 'Engmajor' doesn't know what he/she is talking about either, because 'noceme' wrote "outweighs", not "outways". Outweigh is very much a word in the English language and it means "to exceed in weight, value or importance."
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