I read a Chris Manby once, when I was big on chick-lit. It was called 'Second Chance' and was the first book I remember being really critical of in the genre. Which is surprising, since I'm clearly very critical.
It's just, this girl was obsessed with getting this rich guy. And he was obviously a prick. And she got forced to live with this guy who was normal, so of course she was destined to be with him once the prick had finished shattering all her self esteem and she actually bought a clue. But she had to be embarrassed by her shoddy horse-riding and be burnt by the other bird he was stringing along (literally, she poured coffee over her) first.
Throughout the whole book I could see where Chris Manby was taking it and thought it was strung out far too long.
But anyway, I saw this other book recently, 'crazy in love' by Chrissie Manby. I didn't think there would be any difference really, but the plotline intrigued me. So I got it (on sale, obviously) and read it yesterday.
And hmmm. It's not the same writer - Chris was writing between Pembrokeshire and London. Chrissie is blatantly American.
The book was about a socialite who falls for a TV star and tries to date him. His agent persuades him it's good publicity, but eventually he gets sick of her - especially when she tries to force him to marry her - and she tries everything, and I mean everything to get him back. So she decides to do one of those thrill-seeking things where you pay to be kidnapped ... but gets kidnapped for real, with her gardener. And they escape and spend a couple of weeks trekking through forest and up hills and miraculously in this time she goes from airhead to ecowarrior. Sure.
It was well written. I mean, I thought the socialite was vapid, and one of those people who'll appropriate blame to anyone but themselves, but it does become clear that the writer's aware of that and does poke fun at her. I just ... it didn't have a believability at the end. She was writing with an agenda, like 'hey, you can love labels and protect the environment! You can be eco-friendly without smelling like crap and making no effort! OMG!' ... I hate when writers force their agendas down your throat like it. There was another writer who did it too - I'm not thinking of Stefenie Meyer, despite the whole sex-before-marriage thing, I mean they did this whole speech at the end of the book that's meant to be an epiphany but just ended up a soapbox - anyway, it flipping annoys me. Bury your agenda in metaphors and character actions, geez!
Oh my god thank you! All the reviews I've read have been gushing over how great this book is.
ReplyDeleteI got the book for free with a magazine and throughout reading it I was thinking, is this serious?
Honestly the worst book I have ever read. I'm a bit confused over the chris/chrissie Manby thing but I read the one written by Chrissie.
It was just how the main character turned from a stupid bimbo into a well read, strongly minded hippie. Where did this new vocabulary of hers come from? I'm just glad I didn't have to pay for it.
Mmm yeah please disregard my user name, I was young and hopeless when I created it.