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Driving the Saudis: A Chauffeur's Tale of the World's Richest Princesses (plus their servants, nannies, and one royal hairdresser)

par Jayne Amelia Larson

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The true-to-life account of a female chauffeur hired to drive the Saudi royal family in Los Angeles. After more than a decade of working in Hollywood, actress Jayne Amelia Larson found herself out of luck, out of work, and out of prospects. When she got hired to drive for the Saudi royal family vaca­tioning in Beverly Hills, Larson thought she'd been handed the golden ticket. She'd heard stories of the Saudis bestowing $20,000 tips and Rolex watches on their drivers, but when the family arrived at LAX with twenty million dollars in cash, Larson realized that she might be in for the ride of her life. With awestruck humor and deep compassion, Larson shares the incredible insights she gained as the lone female in a detail of more than forty chauffeurs assigned to drive a beautiful Saudi princess, her family, and their extensive entourage. At its heart, this is an upstairs-downstairs, true-to-life fable for our global times; a story about the corruption that nearly infinite wealth causes, and about what we all do for money. Equal parts funny, surprising, and insightful, Driving the Saudis provides both entertainment and sharp social commentary on one of the world's most secretive families.… (plus d'informations)
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4 sur 4
DNF. Too much swearing, author sounds very arrogant ( )
  wrightja2000 | Sep 6, 2018 |
"Janni" is working as a chauffeur when she is hired to drive the women of the Saudi "Royal" Family on one of their regular visits to Beverly Hills...

There were some interesting parts explaining: the political situation; how the Saudi's own a goodly portion of Beverly Hills Hotels; many many Houses in expensive areas (but often stay in hotels); the time & money spent on shopping & plastic surgery; the treatment of their "servants" (they hold the passports virtually "enslaving" them); the treatment of their paid workers; religious beliefs that are in accordance & opposition to the Quran; and how she was "stiffed" on her tip as she was the only woman and was working for the "royal" women.

It was ok, but one never got to know the Saudi's except one of the princess cousins and a few of the Nannys.

I guess rude, demanding, falsely-entitled people are everywhere..... ( )
  Auntie-Nanuuq | Feb 12, 2017 |
Jayne Amelia Larson's memoir starts out the way anybody's story of trying to pursue their dream might start. Girl moves to LA to try to make it in the film industry. Girl gathers mountains of debt while failing to gather mountains of job offers. Girl takes utter crap job to pay the bills. It's a common story, but the utter crap job that Larson takes is a boon to her readers because she's not waiting tables or cleaning toilets, rather she's chauffeuring a pack of rich Saudi royals.

As it turns out, a truly awful job for Larson makes for an engaging memoir that proves to be both entertaining and enlightening. Life among the Middle East's most filthy rich is bizarre to say the least. The Princess heading up the party spends most of her days shopping in high end stores with family, friends, and servants and demands that the chauffeur for each participant follow along as the party walks between stores. A tea set gets its own expensive hotel room. Women who, at home, are expected to be covered from head to toe to go out in public, who may not even be looked upon by a man not related to them, suddenly throw off their restrictions, not to mention most of their clothes once they hit American soil. Larson is responsible for catering to her employers' every demand, no matter how ludicrous, and standing at the end of a long road, is that beacon of freedom - the unfathomably large tip the Saudis are rumored to pay for a job well done - a tip Larson is counting on and slaving toward in hopes of keeping her creditors at bay.

Driving the Saudis is a fascinating book, really. On one hand it is a memoir of a woman pushed to the brink by an unbelievably demanding job, but also a woman who found unexpected friends in the servants to the royal family. On the other hand, the book proves to be an enlightening look at a culture that can rarely be seen from the inside. Larson's book is compact and well-paced, moving from one anecdote of her time with the Saudis to another fluidly in such a way that never loses the reader's interest. Larson's tales of the Saudis are wild, mind-boggling, and occasionally funny, but Larson never seems to lose sight of the fact that these are people she is writing about and shines a light on the paradoxical lives of the Saudi women who have more money at their disposal than most of us can even imagine in a lifetime but whose lives are fiercely constrained by a society ruled by strict Muslim law.

I fully expected Driving the Saudis to be an entertaining read, but I was surprised again and again by Larson's unique insights into the lives of both the rich Saudi royals and their servants, who are little more than girls working to send money home to their families. Driving the Saudis is an amusing romp among the rich, but it's also a fascinating snapshot of a culture that could hardly be more foreign to us. ( )
  yourotherleft | Jan 9, 2013 |
I often like a non-sensical biography that shows how other people live and is unpretentious. This is it. You can see how the Saudi Arabian royal family lives, which is completely fascinating. I can't wait to have some down time to finish this. I can't get enough of it. Wish there were more bios like this one. ( )
  KarenADavis | Dec 26, 2012 |
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The true-to-life account of a female chauffeur hired to drive the Saudi royal family in Los Angeles. After more than a decade of working in Hollywood, actress Jayne Amelia Larson found herself out of luck, out of work, and out of prospects. When she got hired to drive for the Saudi royal family vaca­tioning in Beverly Hills, Larson thought she'd been handed the golden ticket. She'd heard stories of the Saudis bestowing $20,000 tips and Rolex watches on their drivers, but when the family arrived at LAX with twenty million dollars in cash, Larson realized that she might be in for the ride of her life. With awestruck humor and deep compassion, Larson shares the incredible insights she gained as the lone female in a detail of more than forty chauffeurs assigned to drive a beautiful Saudi princess, her family, and their extensive entourage. At its heart, this is an upstairs-downstairs, true-to-life fable for our global times; a story about the corruption that nearly infinite wealth causes, and about what we all do for money. Equal parts funny, surprising, and insightful, Driving the Saudis provides both entertainment and sharp social commentary on one of the world's most secretive families.

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