Archive for August 19th, 2010

Chick Lit Classic: My Best Friend’s Girl by Dorothy Koomson

Posted By Chloe on August 19th, 2010

Chick Lit Classics is a regular feature on Chick Lit Reviews where we highlight the books we feel are classics of the chick lit genre. Feel free to discuss our choices in the comments section!“”

I first came across Dorothy Koomson a few years ago when her novel My Best Friend’s Girl was featured on the now defunct Richard and Judy book club in 2006. The novel went on to win that year, and catapulted Koomson to a huge new level in the UK and has now made her a must-read of mine every year! I loved the sound of this book when Richard, Judy and their guests spoke about it so I quickly purchased my own copy which I devoured in just a few days. I’ve since passed it on to my mum and nan who also loved it so it’s a book that will appeal across the generations. It tells the tale of a wronged friend who has to suddenly become a mother to her deceased friend’s daughter despite her betrayal. It’s a compelling read, and one you won’t want to put down. Simply brilliant and a huge must-read from me.

“What would you do for the friend who broke your heart? Best friends Kamryn Matika and Adele Brannon thought nothing could come between them - until Adele did the unthinkable and slept with Kamryn’s fiance, Nate. Worse still, she got pregnant and had his child. When Kamryn discovered the truth about their betrayal she vowed never to see any of them again. Two years later, Kamryn receives a letter from Adele asking her to visit her in hospital. Adele is dying and begs Kamryn to adopt her daughter, Tegan. With a great job and a hectic social life, the last thing Kamryn needs is a five year old to disrupt things. Especially not one who reminds her of Nate. But with no one else to take care of Tegan and Adele fading fast, does she have any other choice? So begins a difficult journey that leads Kamryn towards forgiveness, love, responsibility and, ultimately, a better understanding of herself.”

Author Article: Wendy Holden

Posted By Leah on August 19th, 2010

We were contacted a while back and asked if we would like to read Wendy Holden’s latest book Gallery Girl. We were also offered the chance to chat to Wendy or get her to write us a guest post. Because of the hectic-ness of the past two weeks we settled on a guest post and here Wendy discusses her new book and tells us why she decided to base it around the ‘Cinderella’ fairy tale.

Gallery Girl is indeed a sort of Cinderella story in that the put-upon heroine eventually triumphs, and it contains some fabulously Ugly Sisters in the persons of ruthless gallery owner Angelica and competitive nympho art collector Fuchsia Klumpp. First and foremost, however, it’s a comedy.

The books I most like to write are behind-the-scenes looks at wealthy, glittering worlds, but they also have to be funny. It seems to me that there is innate humour in the very state of being glamorous, rich and famous, because it takes such effort to maintain the façade. Opportunities to come a cropper and reveal the gap between appearance and reality are rife. And it’s these gaps that we’re all most interested in.

So I am always looking for potential worlds to conquer in this respect, and contemporary art was a perfect one. There’s so much money and fame involved, and the actual artwork is frequently so hilarious. Earlier this year, at the international contemporary art fair the Venice Biennale, I stood in disbelief in front of some black rubber flags, a stuffed cat on top of an unfinished IKEA cabinet, some framed knickers and a ‘corpse’ face down in a swimming pool. All masterpieces, apparently.

So Gallery Girl was a great opportunity for me to give full expression to the fantastic comic potential of this sort of art, about which everyone has an opinion and which in my view is made all the funnier by the extraordinarily po-faced stance of most of its perpetrators and defenders.

Alice, my heroine, is a nice girl who likes proper paintings but nonetheless ends up as assistant in the OneSquared Gallery, a showcase of contemporary art craziness featuring heads made of frozen wee, gold-sprayed wheelchairs and hairy pebbles.

The possible characters seemed endless -– the nude model, the showman auctioneer, the publicity-milking, super-rich contemporary artist versus the talented but skint traditional portrait artist, to name but a few. I could see immediately the potential for the perfect glamorous comedy. The lust, loot and lunacy of the world of knickers nailed to chopping boards!

I had the background, too. I have always been interested in art, I used to work on an art magazine and I even had a flourishing career as a cartoonist once, drawing for Vogue and the Independent. Now I collect, although not on the Fuchsia scale! And the more I researched and wrote Gallery Girl, the more I itched to make a spoof contemporary art exhibition myself. It was a small step from this to adopting the persona of Zeb Spaw, the bigheaded bad-boy artist who is the villain of Gallery Girl, and creating an entire exhibition, angry_with_britain.

angry_with_britain pulls together a number of contemporary artworks in Zeb’s own inimitable style. ‘Fifteen Metres Of Fame’ is Spaw’s homage to Warhol; a fifteen-metre rope hung with pictures of celebrities mounted on cardboard (mostly from All Bran boxes). ‘Tripetych’ is three panels featuring blown-up images of offal. Sculptures include ‘Flash In The Pan’ – a gold-sprayed loo - ‘The Death of Rock and Roll’ and the harrowing ‘Iraq’. There’s also ‘Hunter Gatherer’ - shopping lists found abandoned in baskets in the local supermarket and framed in rows of four. ‘Stigmata’ – a questioning piece featuring gold-sprayed gardening gloves - and ‘Pants’, the inexpressible loneliness of the human condition as shown through a pair of large white Y-fronts.

All in all, writing Gallery Girl was certainly the most fun I’ve ever had working on a book, which I hope comes out in the novel! Gallery Girl’s available from every good bookshop and you can catch my/Zeb’s exhibition, angry_with_britain indefinitely on my website, www.wendyholden.net.