May 26, 2009

Secret Dreamworld of a Shopaholic and other books

I'm reading several books this week. Well, I already finished the easy one, which was Secret Dreamworld of a Shopaholic by Sophie Kinsella. I have read other books by her and like the fact that they can be read in about an hour and there's always some 'so there' moment for the heroine. However, I had been avoiding Shopaholic because I feared it would distress me - you may recall from my 'She's Come Undone' spoiler that I have issues with books about people who create their own problems.
I am happy to report that Shopaholic did not disappoint and was in fact extremely irritating. It followed a fairly standard pattern: Single white female without a vestige of self-contol in some key area (could be eating, spending, fashion sense, etc.) goes through a difficult spell caused by said lack of self-control but emerges triumphant due to the loyalty of her super cool friends and her own pluck.
Here's the spoiler: Girl in her twenties with a low-paid job has no - wait for it - self-control over her spending. She gets piles of dunning statements from the banks and ignores them, going shopping to feel better. Her attempt to save results in her spending even more money as she equips herself in style to make her own lunches and coffee. Not that I'm some kind of genius financial planner or anything but I found myself yelling, 'STOP SPENDING, WOMAN, YOU'RE IN DEBT YOU SILLY COW!!' Of course, typical of the genre, she has a loyal and rich best friend who lets her live in her trendy apartment for very low rent. Anyway, her attempts to earn more turn out badly and she completely messes up the lives of her parents' neighbors with her own incomepetence and disinterest in others but not to worry - by the end of the book this very average girl has a high-paying TV career and is dating a multi-millionaire, after dumping another multi-millionaire.
Although, to be fair it wasn't quite as irritating as Good in Bed by Jennifer Weiner (which appropriately enough means 'Jennifer Crybaby' in German), which I read a couple of years ago. I have to admit it got off to an unusual and creative start, with the overweight heroine's boyfriend writing an article about how it feels to date a fat girl. I thought that was a cool twist and figured this would be the story of someone who changes their life through hard work and discipline, and with luck a final satisfying humiliation of the crappy boyfriend. But no, the heroine continues to mope around, although she somehow manages to parlay her mopeyness into a BFF relationship with a famous actress, who takes her on fabulous, all expenses paid vacations and introduces her to handsome movie stars. Naturally, the richest and handsomest movie star falls for her but he's not quite what she's looking for so she ends up marrying a wonderful, kind, considerate doctor instead, who is also completely crazy about her. Totally believable. Oh, and did I mention she's pregnant? Of course, it goes without saying that her friend the actress decorates their new home with a gorgeous designer nursury as a wedding present.
Side comment: This is obviously just silly because my mom was once best friends with one of the Young and the Restless actresses and I got, like, a sweater for my birthday and a date with Michael Damien. Which was quite nice and I think a bit more realistic, don't you? Or when was the last time Julia Roberts outfitted your house with $50K worth of Pottery Barn furniture? So, nice fantasy but I prefer heroines that work for their happy ending.
I am also reading The Reader by Bernhard Schlink for book club, although I am reading it in German (Der Vorleser) and it's a bit too serious for my taste. I know, I'm hard to please. But frankly, the affair of a teenage boy with an older woman, told from the perspective of the boy, isn't exactly my go to genre.
And finally, I am meandering my way through The Self-Aware Universe by Amit Goswami, which is a fascinating juxtaposition of classical and quantum theory that concludes that consciousness, rather than matter, is the underlying fabric of the universe. In other words, matter doesn't cause consciousness, consciousness causes (or collapses the wave function of) matter. I'll probably revisit this one in a later post because the implications are pretty interesting. Maven - your husband might like it.

11 comments:

  1. Puh - that's a lot of reading, but I would have absolutely no patience for the Shopaholic one, I'm afraid...

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  2. Kinsella is too annoying for me: I prefer my fluff to have vampires, shape shifters and Dark Ones. I have issues with THe Reader, it will probably be sitting on my TBR shelf longer than The Book Thief did. Tell us how you felt about the writing, because I know the plot already.

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  3. I had trouble with the Book Thief too and ended up not finishing it. As for The Reader, the writing seems quite good, honest, descriptive without overdoing it.

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  4. I enjoyed the 2 books I read in the Shopaholic series. Right now I'm reading "The Middle Place" by Kelly Corrigan. I resisted it for a long time because I thought it would be too upsetting. But I recently saw her speak and it completely changed my mind. The Maven's husband is stuck in the Vampire genre and I don't see that ending soon.

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  5. I was staying in NYC while I was reading Shopaholic. I nearly missed my shopping tour of designer showrooms because I was laughing so hard! The tour guide was quite amused when I admitted that I nearly missed my own shopping adventure because I was reading about a fictional one!

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  6. I haven't read any of these, but I've seen the commercials for Confession of a Shopaholic, so I'm sure it's like the same thing, right?

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  7. I think the movie was much worse than the book. I did read another Sophie Kinsella, though under a different penname. About a lawyer who waived privilege and had to go underground as a maid. Total beach book, but fun.

    And HoneyPie, not to beat a dead horse, but for goodness sakes get yourself some Shreve!

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  8. Great reviews. I love your wit. I've yelled at a few books myself.

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  9. i don't like actually shopping. why the hell would i read about it?

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  10. OK Lawyer Mom I admit I don't know what Schreve is. I Googled it and came up with this professor guy who authors books about stochastic (predictive) calculus. Now, as it happens I love stochastic calculus but I somehow feel that's not what you meant.

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  11. You had a date with Michael Damien? Where the heck is *that* post?

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