Ali Harris
Auteur de Miracle on Regent Street
A propos de l'auteur
Séries
Œuvres de Ali Harris
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Sexe
- female
- Nationalité
- UK
- Pays (pour la carte)
- England, UK
- Lieu de naissance
- Norfolk, England, UK
Membres
Critiques
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Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 7
- Membres
- 216
- Popularité
- #103,224
- Évaluation
- 3.4
- Critiques
- 12
- ISBN
- 28
- Langues
- 3
- Favoris
- 1
I didn't really like the rest of the book, however. Now, because I don't tend to read much chick-lit because every book I've read of this genre is pretty much the same, I've kept this out of my review because that isn't the fault of the book.
The main issue with this book, for me, was the protagonist, Evie. I went off her in the opening chapters when she revealed herself as totally selfish, in that she stole somebody's job. As I read I imagined a parallel story of a poor girl who turned up for her first day at work only to be turned away because the job had already been taken. It that happened to me I wouldn't have just gone home, I would have fought for my job. Gaping plot hole? From that point on I knew this story would be far-fetched and that Evie and I would never get on.
So she's in a stolen job for two years and is perfectly happy for nobody to respect her, or even know her name. The person before her was well known, so it wasn't a general lack of respect for the person running the stockroom. We have an invisible character, who spends lots of time moaning and winging about being invisible, but not doing anything about it. So she deceives the people she works with by going under someone else's name, deceives the man she starts dating by assuming someone else's personality ... this is not a person I would want to associate with.
The other staff at Hardy's were an interesting bunch of people, highly sterotypical and bordering on cringeworthy. I liked Lily, she brought the sparkle to the story. The foreign cleaning team irritated me no end and I found the way they were portrayed quite insulting. Carly had no sense whatsoever, and clearly didn't respect Evie, but Evie saw her as a good friend for some unfathomable reason. Felix and Sam were nice. Delilah used Evie, which was also ok. I didn't like Joel. Another cringeworthy moment: when he was trying to win Evie back and told her she reminded him of his ex-girlfriend. Good grief ...
The idea of the secret makeovers (more anonymity) was fun, although it got highly repetitive in the story. The imagery was good. I was grateful that the book wasn't written on the assumption that every reader knows London intimately, so that was a plus-point.
The writing style was ok, it worked with the story, although the book was terribly overlong. If all the descriptions of every single thing every single character was wearing were omitted, the book would be quie skinny. There were also some hideous typos /grammatical errors in the book (not the fault of the author).
To end, I wouldn't recommend this book. It just didn't work for me.… (plus d'informations)