Particularize Appertaining To Books Cuban Heels Covermount (B Magazine)
Title | : | Cuban Heels Covermount (B Magazine) |
Author | : | Emily Barr |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 325 pages |
Published | : | September 2005 |
Categories | : | Womens Fiction. Chick Lit. Fiction. Travel |
Emily Barr
Hardcover | Pages: 325 pages Rating: 3.4 | 872 Users | 77 Reviews
Explanation Toward Books Cuban Heels Covermount (B Magazine)
Emily Barr always write in a way that makes it almost impossible to stop reading, even if you absolutely can't stand the main character. Oh, how I hated Maggie. Still do!This book is the most depressive and oppressive I've read so far from this author, glad I already read several others or I don't know if I would continue...
Also,if a writer is using a foreign language, he/she should be completely sure the words and phrases are correct. Several of the "spanish" words and expressions used were in fact portuguese and/or italian, and not even in a correct sentence. So no point in thanking who helped with that at the begginng of the book, as the help was clearly extremely poor.
Point Books To Cuban Heels Covermount (B Magazine)
ISBN: | 0755328973 (ISBN13: 9780755328970) |
Setting: | Cuba |
Rating Appertaining To Books Cuban Heels Covermount (B Magazine)
Ratings: 3.4 From 872 Users | 77 ReviewsRate Appertaining To Books Cuban Heels Covermount (B Magazine)
this is also entitled cuban heels bored with your life? steal someone else's ...... after maggie was ditched by her boyfriend of 5 years she moved to brighton. unable to find a job she ended up as a lap dancer but told everyone else she worked for amex good advertisement! she has no friends but when she bought a baby monitor for her sister she finds it tunes into the same frequency as the couple upstairs with a young son and so begins a 'remote' friendship discovering they r moving to cuba for 6A very very light read. Ridiculous plot and so silly stereotypes of high flying women... however some pertinent points towards the end of how the mind deals with trauma.
Emily Barr always write in a way that makes it almost impossible to stop reading, even if you absolutely can't stand the main character. Oh, how I hated Maggie. Still do! This book is the most depressive and oppressive I've read so far from this author, glad I already read several others or I don't know if I would continue...Also,if a writer is using a foreign language, he/she should be completely sure the words and phrases are correct. Several of the "spanish" words and expressions used were in
This book felt like it had a lot of promise to be kind of a chick-lit thriller, which I was very interested in. In the end, it just fizzled out for me and I found myself literally saying, "meh" as I flipped the final page. Potentially interesting characters that I wanted to know what happened to them, but, perhaps in the name of trying to make them "complex," Barr fell flat and just ended up making them not very compelling after all. I enjoyed the descriptions of living in Cuba though - this was
Boring.
An easy read. A bit far fetched in places. Havana sounds amazing and this book makes me want to go there. I wont let this book put me off trying her others.
In "Cuba" Emily Barr serves up her signature cocktail of chick lit and sociopolitical commentary. Just take some relationship pressures, mix in daddy issues, throw in a few repressed memories, the trade embargo, dual economy, add some simple syrup and top it off with a lime wedge. Mmmmm..... Delicious!
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