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I started this, and at about 35 pages in, thought it was terrible and debated finishing it. I thought that it was fairly short and seemed to be a quick read, maybe I'll see if it got better.
It didn't.
I finished it, and I debated giving it two stars but then realized there really wasn't anything I liked about this book. The author talks about the writer in the book who writes with sentences that are too long. I'm not sure there was a sentence longer than 6 words in this book. All of the sentences were choppy and short. I hated it.
It seemed like the author wanted to try to write a "smart" book but ended up with one-dimensional characters and no plot line. The liberal message came across loud and clear, although that didn't detract for me. It just seemed like the author using this book for her political platform.
Honestly I can't tell you the plot. The point of view alternated between Rachel, the daughter that sleeps with her professor, Becca, the mom who also sleeps with the professor, the professor, and Khloe, who doesn't seem to fit with the story (she works for Becca's husband and is subletting the professor's apartment, but her storyline is forced). The husband gets a chapter somewhere in the middle too. They are all forgettable. Characters are introduced, not explained, and sometimes, forgotten.
This book clearly wasn't for me.
It didn't.
I finished it, and I debated giving it two stars but then realized there really wasn't anything I liked about this book. The author talks about the writer in the book who writes with sentences that are too long. I'm not sure there was a sentence longer than 6 words in this book. All of the sentences were choppy and short. I hated it.
It seemed like the author wanted to try to write a "smart" book but ended up with one-dimensional characters and no plot line. The liberal message came across loud and clear, although that didn't detract for me. It just seemed like the author using this book for her political platform.
Honestly I can't tell you the plot. The point of view alternated between Rachel, the daughter that sleeps with her professor, Becca, the mom who also sleeps with the professor, the professor, and Khloe, who doesn't seem to fit with the story (she works for Becca's husband and is subletting the professor's apartment, but her storyline is forced). The husband gets a chapter somewhere in the middle too. They are all forgettable. Characters are introduced, not explained, and sometimes, forgotten.
This book clearly wasn't for me.