1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Not so great, November 25, 2008
This review is from: Beautiful Liars (Paperback)
The above commenter summed the book up nicely; however, the book itself is a pretty pointless read. There is no emotion, it's simple and dull. Not worth the money to buy it, but if you really want to see for yourself, then try renting it at the library. It was an extremely disappointing read, with VERY FEW parts that made the reader laugh.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
fun satire, October 11, 2008
This review is from: Beautiful Liars (Paperback)
The concept is relatively simple; have four almost famous celebs sit around a table discussing events and issues and dissing one another. To insure explosions, the network brass understands the quartet must not just be bosom buddies; they must be queens fighting to own the Beehive chat show.
Emma Ronson gave up journalistic respectability to become a daytime TV star. Fifty year old Sutton Lancaster was aged out of her respectable news anchor job. Former teen model Simone Williams needs this job although her pay cannot cover her debts or prevent her ex from psychopathic stalking and more. Finally, Finn Robards rounds out the table as the only male, the rational amusing" gay sidekick" to the three hostile female divas. However each faces personal crisis that could destroy them and if one goes down, the Beehive will probably die too. Though they dislike each other, the four musketeers must learn the Dumas lesson of "one for all and all for one".
BEAUTIFUL LIARS satirically rips the famous as allegedly knowledgeable pundits who in fact are hedonistic selfish individuals who live in a shallow world of self deceit pretending to know everything about anything when they know nothing. Any moment this reviewer expected Professor Irwin Corey to appear. The key to this lampooning is the four Beehive hosts remains consistent throughout even when they try to help one another. Kylie Adams makes the case we know as much and probably much more than those talking heads whose claim to fame is membership in the Hall of Shame.
Harriet Klausner
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