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Women's Fiction

Lucky Stars

Lucky Stars

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.97
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: entertaining
Review: This book is about a thirty something woman who moves to Hollywood to become a star. Her bored, lonely, overbearing, nagging, widowed Mother moves across country to be close to her daughter. In a typical Jane Heller way, her Mother becomes an overnight sensation. And the mother/daughter roles become reversed. THe daughter starts worrying about the mother in a nagging, overbearing way.

The book has some very funny moments as we see the daughter become a pain, and as we see a plain midwestern Mom become hip. But in the begining, the mother (Helen) was too much of everything. I got so annoyed with her at one point I almost put the book down. It's a little too in your face, and I understand why Heller did this, but I still didn't like it.

My favorite thing about Heller's books are her strong 30 something characters. I always like seeing woman who are vulnerable, but still persevere, who are not gorgeous, but have healthy attractive looks. And who are fine living without a man. This is Heller's greatest strength, and it makes Stacey Reiser a good, beleivable, and funny heroine.

A fun, fast paced read- try it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: entertaining
Review: This book is about a thirty something woman who moves to Hollywood to become a star. Her bored, lonely, overbearing, nagging, widowed Mother moves across country to be close to her daughter. In a typical Jane Heller way, her Mother becomes an overnight sensation. And the mother/daughter roles become reversed. THe daughter starts worrying about the mother in a nagging, overbearing way.

The book has some very funny moments as we see the daughter become a pain, and as we see a plain midwestern Mom become hip. But in the begining, the mother (Helen) was too much of everything. I got so annoyed with her at one point I almost put the book down. It's a little too in your face, and I understand why Heller did this, but I still didn't like it.

My favorite thing about Heller's books are her strong 30 something characters. I always like seeing woman who are vulnerable, but still persevere, who are not gorgeous, but have healthy attractive looks. And who are fine living without a man. This is Heller's greatest strength, and it makes Stacey Reiser a good, beleivable, and funny heroine.

A fun, fast paced read- try it.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Fell A Bit Flat
Review: This book was amusing in a Jane Heller kind of way. However, it wasn't quite as good as her usual fare.

Helen started out so annoying that I couldn't care less about her. And Stacey was such a wimp where her mother was concerned that I found it nearly impossible to care about her either, especially after she succumbed to going on a tour of a tuna fish factory just because her mother bullied her into it. Grow a spine, woman! I thought the romance with Jack had potential, but it was introduced so early and nothing really happened there either to make me care much about it.

The whole thing was very predictable with no twists and turns to surprise you even a little bit. It was a busy read, more than an enjoyable read as Ms. Heller's books usually are.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A Fun Romp in LA
Review: This book written by Jane Heller is passably entertaining. It reminds me of a made for T.V. romantic comedy. All of the elements that make a major motion picture are there, but whatever it is that makes you want to watch (or this case read) something over and over again are missing. Don't get me wrong, there are moments of genuine character developement and humor in the book, but the moments are too few and far between to sustain the story. The plot and the main mystery in the story oddly seems to be in the background. It is predicable with no real plot twists. The first person narration used in the novel is supposed to establish a rappaport bewteen the narrator and the reader fails at times. I felt irrated with the narrator many times, not enchanted. All in all this book is fun to read, but utterly forgettable.


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