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Miriam Parker

Auteur de The Shortest Way Home: A Novel

2 oeuvres 154 utilisateurs 16 critiques

Œuvres de Miriam Parker

The Shortest Way Home: A Novel (2018) 121 exemplaires
Room and Board (2022) 33 exemplaires

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This a perfectly acceptable way to pass an afternoon.

Very impressed with their wine tasting skills, really, because I definitely wouldn't be able to taste that lavender smell.

I like the premise, I do, it just felt a little too formulated and events a tad too organised.
 
Signalé
whakaora | 12 autres critiques | Mar 5, 2023 |
Room and Board --- first impression had me intrigued. Once I began reading though, my opinion changed. The storyline and how it played out was really all over the place and unrealistic. A book should have some fantasy in it, but the situations the main character gets in are often unrealistic. The storyline moves quickly and I found myself not keeping up with it. It is a quick read for those who want to give it a try.
 
Signalé
BridgetteS | 2 autres critiques | Sep 24, 2022 |
Room and Board by Miriam Parker is the perfect cure for insomnia. I struggled to finish this book. The disgraced publicist becomes a dorm mom at the boarding school she attended for high school. We are left to wonder how she got this this job for which she is not qualified. The other dorm moms must do double duty by teaching and chaperoning a building full of students. Gillian neglects her job from the beginning. The first night she is too tired to check on her charges and is just shocked when she discovers evidence of partying in the building the next day including the requisite sick teenager from overindulging in alcohol. This will not be the last time Gillian neglects her duties (dating before duties seems to be Gillian’s motto). I was surprised when a pampered princess named Bunny (a senior) befriends Gillian. Bunny and her clique frequently hang out in Gillian’s suite. The students just love Gillian, and they trust her from the beginning (is anyone buying this). Gillian pays more attention to her love life than the students she is responsible for. Gillian’s crush from high school is now the father of Rainbow who happens to live in Gillian’s dorm (what a coincidence). Here is Gillian’s chance for the man she has been unable to get out of her thoughts for twenty years. She is willing to overlook what he did back in high school. The students are your stereotypical pampered rich kids who expect the best and enjoy torturing the scholarship students. I believe the author has spent too much time watching Gossip Girl (both versions) and Gilmore Girls. I can see details from both shows in the book. I had to roll my eyes at some of the scenes. When you put out a sign stating that you can ask me anything, what do you expect. People are going to ask you some ridiculous questions. Gillian gets annoyed when a child shows up at her door asking for help. This means taking time away from getting ready for a date or stalking her crush on social media. The author is detail oriented. I really did not need to know what Gillian wore down to her shoes or that she spends an hour doing her face care routine (or all the items she used to keep her skin looking youthful). There are many contradictions in the book. If the headmaster’s assistant does the accounting for the school, why is there a finance department? Gillian tells the girls that accepting freebies will make you beholden to others, but readers are told in great detail how the majority of Gillian’s wardrobe is from freebies (clients and from companies). The dialogue is awkward and unrealistic (the author should have spent some time talking to teenagers). There were some plot points started in the book that were never revisited while others were left unresolved. I found the ending to be unrealistic. Room and Board is one of those books that left me feeling like I had just wasted a few hours of my time.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Kris_Anderson | 2 autres critiques | Sep 2, 2022 |
Gillian is back at the boarding school she went to as a scholarship student. She is now the dorm mom and licking her wounds after losing her business as a publicist to the stars due to a scandal. She finds that there are a lot of things that haven't changed from years ago and yet things are different too. She runs into her high school crush who is now a single parent of one of her boarding students, so there is a little second chance romance as well.

While I liked the idea of this story, I wasn't blown away by any of it. Not that I HAVE to be blown away, but I really feel the story could have been a lot more. 3 stars… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
sdbookhound | 2 autres critiques | Aug 14, 2022 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
2
Membres
154
Popularité
#135,795
Évaluation
3.1
Critiques
16
ISBN
11

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