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Women's Fiction

Look at Me: A Novel

Look at Me: A Novel

List Price: $14.95
Your Price: $14.95
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Judging a book by its cover
Review: Great cover art. Lousy, self-indulgent writing. In a word: boring.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Absorbing novel about female promiscuity and sexuality
Review: Having been caught in the trap of "Oprah"esque novels, Lauren Porosoff Mitchell's debut novel was a ravenous read and a breath of fresh air. Her evocative prose brings to life Dana, a powerful sexual aggressor struggling with the vulnerability she feels when loving and trusting men. While Look at Me is not laden with action and suspense, it is an absorbing read that exposes the raw, unadultered side of female promiscuity.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: For the Reveler, the Luminary
Review: I loved this book. Mitchell's story will most likely appeal to people at a certain point in life: early 20's, world upside down, engaging in reckless self-discovery. Of course it's self-indulgent. Who isn't at that age. But we look for other voices to resonate with our own and assure us we aren't doing this alone.

It's definitely not for the sensible types who like black and white and neat little packages. There's a fluidity to her writing, an ebbing and flowing that I found refreshing and stimulating. She doesn't draw conclusions or spell out moral lessons. She states the facts of her life, bare as bone, and uses poetic imagery as a vehicle to express her experiences.

If you've worn loneliness like a familiar t-shirt rather than a disabling condition, if you've entertained compulsive behaviour because you can't contain your rage, if you've seen your world in rhythyms and colors rather than facts and achievements, then read Look at Me and revel in all it's philosophical wanderings, fluid language and raw emotion.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: For the Reveler, the Luminary
Review: I loved this book. Mitchell's story will most likely appeal to people at a certain point in life: early 20's, world upside down, engaging in reckless self-discovery. Of course it's self-indulgent. Who isn't at that age. But we look for other voices to resonate with our own and assure us we aren't doing this alone.

It's definitely not for the sensible types who like black and white and neat little packages. There's a fluidity to her writing, an ebbing and flowing that I found refreshing and stimulating. She doesn't draw conclusions or spell out moral lessons. She states the facts of her life, bare as bone, and uses poetic imagery as a vehicle to express her experiences.

If you've worn loneliness like a familiar t-shirt rather than a disabling condition, if you've entertained compulsive behaviour because you can't contain your rage, if you've seen your world in rhythyms and colors rather than facts and achievements, then read Look at Me and revel in all it's philosophical wanderings, fluid language and raw emotion.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't bother with this one
Review: I thought this book was just a bunch of rambling, non-sensical and self-indulgent tripe. The writing is poor and the content, besides a few racy sections (which are all essentially contained the Amazon excerpt), is mind-numbingly boring.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Look at this Debut Novel!
Review: I was browsing the "new fiction" table at the front of a local DC bookshop when I stumbled across an autographed copy of "Look at Me" by Lauren Porosoff Mitchell. I finished reading it last night. Bravo to Ms. Mitchell for her excellent first novel. Remarkably written by a young women who had recently received her law degree, Mitchell describes Dana, a character struggling with herself. Mitchell paints the picture of a woman with two faces: The first face appears as she ravages innocent men night after night, lusting after the feeling of power she achieves with each notch on her bedpost. The second face appears as her character develops...she shows her feminine vulnerability as she falls for a one-night-stand, creating a fantasy love affair through letters, dreams, and thoughts.

But, thought frustrated with Dana, you can't help but relate to her on some level.

Lauren Porosoff Mitchell, good work! Looking forward to your second novel.....

Now where can I find those necklaces at Eastern Market?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Look at this Debut Novel!
Review: I was browsing the "new fiction" table at the front of a local DC bookshop when I stumbled across an autographed copy of "Look at Me" by Lauren Porosoff Mitchell. I finished reading it last night. Bravo to Ms. Mitchell for her excellent first novel. Remarkably written by a young women who had recently received her law degree, Mitchell describes Dana, a character struggling with herself. Mitchell paints the picture of a woman with two faces: The first face appears as she ravages innocent men night after night, lusting after the feeling of power she achieves with each notch on her bedpost. The second face appears as her character develops...she shows her feminine vulnerability as she falls for a one-night-stand, creating a fantasy love affair through letters, dreams, and thoughts.

But, thought frustrated with Dana, you can't help but relate to her on some level.

Lauren Porosoff Mitchell, good work! Looking forward to your second novel.....

Now where can I find those necklaces at Eastern Market?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Look at this Debut Novel!
Review: I was browsing the "new fiction" table at the front of a local DC bookshop when I stumbled across an autographed copy of "Look at Me" by Lauren Porosoff Mitchell. I finished reading it last night. Bravo to Ms. Mitchell for her excellent first novel. Remarkably written by a young women who had recently received her law degree, Mitchell describes Dana, a character struggling with herself. Mitchell paints the picture of a woman with two faces: The first face appears as she ravages innocent men night after night, lusting after the feeling of power she achieves with each notch on her bedpost. The second face appears as her character develops...she shows her feminine vulnerability as she falls for a one-night-stand, creating a fantasy love affair through letters, dreams, and thoughts.

But, thought frustrated with Dana, you can't help but relate to her on some level.

Lauren Porosoff Mitchell, good work! Looking forward to your second novel.....

Now where can I find those necklaces at Eastern Market?

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't bother with this one
Review: Look at Me is uninhibited, robust, and very wide-open. Lauren Porosoff Mitchell is a master at teasing a phrase, capturing a mood, and orchestrating the sensual leading to the psychological. Dana's compulsive adventure -- a back-and-forth romp through the real and the virtual -- is seductive yet distant, bold yet timid, and flirtatious to the point of personal danger. Here is the rational in service of the irrational . . . the science of seduction. And yet here, too, is strength borne of vulnerability . . . the object of desire beckoning the voyeur to "look at me." It is into that beaker that the author pours out her soul and thereby colors her world. Love is a risky experiment. Indeed!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Risky Love
Review: Look at Me is uninhibited, robust, and very wide-open. Lauren Porosoff Mitchell is a master at teasing a phrase, capturing a mood, and orchestrating the sensual leading to the psychological. Dana's compulsive adventure -- a back-and-forth romp through the real and the virtual -- is seductive yet distant, bold yet timid, and flirtatious to the point of personal danger. Here is the rational in service of the irrational . . . the science of seduction. And yet here, too, is strength borne of vulnerability . . . the object of desire beckoning the voyeur to "look at me." It is into that beaker that the author pours out her soul and thereby colors her world. Love is a risky experiment. Indeed!


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