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Thinking Of You - The Ultimate Escapist Read
Jill Mansell, unlike other writers in the rom-com arena, seems to get better with every book she writes. Thinking of You is her latest offering and proves that it is possible to get better with age!



Ginny Holland, a best selling author if left rattling around in her house on her own after daughter Jem goes to university. Lonely, she advertises her spare room for rent. Instead of a happy roommate, she gets moaning Laurel who is still hung up on her ex-boyfriend. If that wasn’t enough, Ginny finds herself lusting after two men who can only be bad for her. Will Ginny get the man of her dreams, or will he be the one that gets away?



Mansell has a disarming ability to create characters that you already know and that tends to make her books impossible to put down. This book is no different. It is charmingly written, hopelessly funny and will make you forget all of your own troubles as soon as you read the first page.


(ISBN: 0755328116, ISBN-13: 9780755328116)



Book Price comparison of Thinking Of You



Title: The Smelly Dog: Social Stereotypes from the "Telegraph" Magazine
Author: Victoria MatherSue Macartney-Snape
ISBN: 0719568838
EAN: 9780719568831
96 Pages
Publisher: John Murray
Binding: Hardcover
Publication date: 2006-10-05


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'With consummate skill the authors have once again skewered our national smugness' (Nicky Haslam )

?Opening a volume by Victoria Mather and Sue Macartney-Snape always fills me with delicious apprehension. I know that, in no time, I will be chuckling away at the absurdities of someone who is awfully like me? (Julian Fellowes )

'A dazzling combination' (Jilly Cooper )

'They have a mind-reader's gift for rooting around inside our heads, and serving up every last nuance and pretension as spot-on social comedy' (Nicholas Coleridge )

'For as long as I can remember, Social Stereotypes has been essential reading on a Saturday morning'

(General Sir Mike Jackson )

?Woof of approval for Smelly Dog?

 

(Evening Standard )

?Always amusingly accurate ? a piquant array of character sketches?

(The Oldie )

?Another splendid romp through a gloriously eccentric gallery of characters?

(Good Book Guide )
With his charming twinkly stare and his bouncing enthusiasm, Horace exudes lovability. Unfortunately that?s not all he exudes. His breath is like napalm, his coat is matted with weeds from the goldfish pond, and ? ever since the ban on hunting ? Eau de Horace has carried subtle topnotes of fox poo. But he?s such a darling that the Fitzroys have become impervious to his pong. Besides, there?s a certain mischievous pleasure to be got from watching their more sniffy guests cope with Horace?s exotic fragrance. These hilarious, razor-sharp pen portraits are spot-on insights into the gamut of modern life. In the one corner are the Sudoku Addicts: Tracey from accounts wondering whether she might have that compulsive sudoku syndrome like what Dean-from-the-postroom?s sister got. In the other are the dilettante Christmas Jigsaw Puzzlers: Aunt Cassie forcing pieces together to create that hopelessly amateurish hump effect before bashing it flat with her rings. The brilliance of these caricatures culled from the Telegraph Magazine is that each and every one rings true.

 

With his charming twinkly stare and his bouncing enthusiasm, Horace exudes lovability. Unfortunately that's not all he exudes. His breath is like napalm, his coat is matted with weeds from the goldfish pond, and -- ever since the ban on hunting -- Eau de Horace has carried subtle topnotes of fox poo. But he's such a darling that the Fitzroys have become impervious to his pong. Besides, there's a certain mischievous pleasure to be got from watching their more sniffy guests cope with Horace's exotic fragrance. These hilarious, razor-sharp pen portraits are spot-on insights into the gamut of modern life. In the one corner are the Sudoku Addicts: Tracey from accounts wondering whether she might have that compulsive sudoku syndrome like what Dean-from-the-postroom's sister got. In the other are the dilettante Christmas Jigsaw Puzzlers: Aunt Cassie forcing pieces together to create that hopelessly amateurish hump effect before bashing it flat with her rings. The brilliance of these caricatures culled from the Telegraph Magazine is that each and every one rings true.
Victoria Mather is a journalist and broadcaster. As travel editor of Vanity Fair she investigates hotel heavens for the stars. She has worked for the Daily Telegraph since 1986, initially as film critic and subsequently as columnist. She is a commentator for CBS and NBC television in Americ, works with Ned Sherrin on BBC Radio 4's Loose Ends, and has a travel column, 'Victoria's Secrets', on the Telegraph's Ultratravel section. She and her husband, John Raymond, live in London, Hampshire, Moscow and the Four Seasons, New York.

Sue Macartney-Snape was born in Tanganyika, educated in Australia and now lives in London. She has had several sell-out exhibitions of her work and has been acclaimed as the Wodehouse of Art. In 2004 she won the Pont Award for drawing the British character.

2008-01-22 book review

These hilariously accurate descriptions of social stereotypes include - the ebay addict, the female hiker, the matching couple, the hotel pianist, the polish handyman and the hen enthusiast.

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