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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A great summer read
CHEET by Anna Davis

Here's the first book to hit American soil by the British author Anna Davis. CHEET is about a young woman who has one of the most interesting love lives I've read about in a long time. She juggles many lovers by using separate colored cell phones to manage each person. At the height of this book, Kathryn, a London cabdriver by night, is dealing with...

Published on July 10, 2003 by Ratmammy

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Other people liked it
I have to admit, Cheet was not one of my favorite books. It is one of those books where you keep waiting for something to happen (which is pretty much the only reason I finished it). The main character, Katherine, is a cab driver in London. She has 5 lovers (seems like an interesting premise doesn't it?) and a color coded cell phone for each lover (I can barely keep...
Published on July 24, 2003


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A great summer read, July 10, 2003
By 
Ratmammy "The Ratmammy" (Ratmammy's Town, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Cheet (Plume Books) (Paperback)
CHEET by Anna Davis

Here's the first book to hit American soil by the British author Anna Davis. CHEET is about a young woman who has one of the most interesting love lives I've read about in a long time. She juggles many lovers by using separate colored cell phones to manage each person. At the height of this book, Kathryn, a London cabdriver by night, is dealing with five different lovers at the same time.

She dates each one haphazardly, as she tries to find time for every one of them without getting them suspicious. Each lover has a distinct personality. Jonny is the ex-rock and roll star who has fallen onto hard times. Stef seems to be playing ball with the mobster crowd. Amy is her sexy lesbian journalist girlfriend. Joel is her young stud muffin, barely in his early 20's. Richard is a divorced man with a cute young daughter who both want to make Kathryn his one and only. None of them know about one another, which leads to some very funny and exciting scenarios.

While Kathryn is working in her cab one night, she picks up a man that she finds of an immediate interest. Does he become lover number six? He doesn't, at least not immediately. What happens between Kathryn and Craig is on a totally different level, and she soon finds out that he's not what he says he is. That makes two of them, since Craig (or Twinkle as she calls him in her mind) does not know about all her lovers. But he leads Kathryn to believe he's a very rich businessman, until one day when she finds out the truth!

What makes CHEET stand out from the rest of the popular chic lit books out there? The first half of the book describes the hilarious antics that go on with Kathryn as she tries to make some sense of her chaotic dating world. But, by the second half of the book, things start to fall apart. It caught me by surprise, because what I thought would happen was that each lover would discover the other. Instead, each of her relationships takes a turn, showing a darker side of life, including a death.

I recommend CHEET for its inventiveness and uniqueness in a world of same-old that is being seen out there in the genre of chic lit. For those of you not totally into chic lit, this may be for you. It is change of pace for those used to copycats of Bridget Jones' Diary and the Shopaholic novels.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting concept, May 31, 2005
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This review is from: Cheet (Plume Books) (Paperback)
This book is about a woman cabdriver, Kathryn, who has five lovers with a different color cell phone for each. She has trouble juggling all these people, all of whom appeal to a different side of her. She's protective of Joel, an androgynous would-be dancer; feels sorry for Jonny, a once-pretty boy who lost his looks in a motorcycle accident; loves solid Richard's little girl, Dotty; is amused by Stef, but worried about his con schemes; and is attracted to Amy and the novelty of a relationship with a woman.

The story traces the arc of each of these relationships. When Kathryn gets to know one of her fares, a guy named Craig Summer, each of her other relationships is affected in unexpected ways.

Kathryn is an interesting though hard-nosed character, and the book subtly explains why she is the way she is. What makes the book interesting is the dynamic plot (something intriguing is always happening) and the memorable cast of characters. Rounding out the group is Winnie, a taxi driver who gives Kathryn "bits of wisdom."

One drawback of the book is the way the author switches quickly and without warning from one scene to another. It can leave the reader feeling disoriented.

Also, the book is a bit darker than most chick lit, although it is marketed as such. Some of the chracters have real problems, which means it is not entirely a light, fluffy read.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Other people liked it, July 24, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Cheet (Plume Books) (Paperback)
I have to admit, Cheet was not one of my favorite books. It is one of those books where you keep waiting for something to happen (which is pretty much the only reason I finished it). The main character, Katherine, is a cab driver in London. She has 5 lovers (seems like an interesting premise doesn't it?) and a color coded cell phone for each lover (I can barely keep track of one cell phone, much less 5!). Actually, she gains a 6th lover during the course of the book, but he never gets his own cell phone. To me, all the characters seemed pretty whiny and needy. There was great potential for humor (I mean, come on, 6 different lovers?), but either I didn't get it, or there was none to be found. Each lover fell into a category (cute lesbian; handsome, young, black buck - probably gay; handsome, young, white buck - in trouble with the law; family man; and finally, scarred, troubled musician). The additional lover would fall into the "mystery man" category as we don't know much about him until the end of the book. Not only are none of these people particularly interesting, but all they seem to do is whine to Katherine about their sad lives, how little they see her, or how much they need (fill in the blank). That said, Katherine really isn't that interesting either. She seems to be sleeping with all these people to fullfill some deep seated psychological need, possibly her difficulties relating to her father, but it's hard to tell. In summary, my feeling is that this book had a lot of potential and didn't live up to it. I thought the book would be funny, but there weren't many amusing moments that I found. I suppose it's possible that I missed the point and Cheet was never supposed to be funny, but it could have at least been interesting.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Were she a man, she'd get a pat on the back, August 18, 2003
By 
ROBERTA SWEEPER (CHICAGO, IL United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Cheet (Plume Books) (Paperback)
A cool female character that doesn't conform to the norm in anything from her workout routine to her choice or numbers of partners. This intriguing novel of one woman juggling five lovers seperated only by their different personalities and the closeness they believe they share with the main character is indeed interesting. Two cheers for chick lit that even guys can love...when is the screenplay coming?
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4.0 out of 5 stars A good light read that builds in suspense, August 11, 2003
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This review is from: Cheet (Plume Books) (Paperback)
I've often wondered about the logistics of bigamy. How, that is, does the average bigamist--not your Mormon extremist type whose wives all know the hubby's sleeping around, but the regular-seeming guy with a wife and kids in Schenectady and another family in Detroit--how does that guy keep it all straight, all the personal stuff you have to remember when you're part of a familial unit? Birthdays and anniversaries in the nuclear and extended families, which set of kids is playing which sports, spousal preferences of various sorts and what you've told to whom. It's hard enough for a faithful monogamist not to get the facts wrong.

Kathryn Cheet, the protagonist of Anna Davis's Cheet, is not a bigamist, because she's not married. But she is managing--just--to keep six relationships going simultaneously. One secret of Kathryn's success is her clever use of multiple, color-coded cell phones--pink for Amy (Kathryn's one female lover), red for Jonny (her scarred musician), green for Richard (her serious guy, with daughter), and so on. Just as important for her success, Kathryn works driving a cab around London at night. Since she is always mobile and she doesn't have a radio in her car, Kathryn's lovers can only reach her by cell phone, and they never know where she will be at any particular time. Kathryn has even managed to keep the whereabouts of her apartment a secret from them--or, at least, from all but one of them. Not surprisingly, Kathryn's carefully compartmentalized world begins to fall apart in the course of Davis's novel. Evidently, you can only keep so many lovers in a single city before the worlds you've constructed with each of them begin to overlap.

Anna Davis's book, at first merely light fare, builds in suspense and gravity as the pages pass, with the reader wondering whether Kathryn, an otherwise likable character, will ever stop torturing herself and those around her with her unlikely juggling act.

Reviewed by Debra Hamel, author of Trying Neaira: The True Story of a Courtesan's Scandalous Life in Ancient Greece
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5.0 out of 5 stars Ring, Ring!, August 3, 2003
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This review is from: Cheet (Plume Books) (Paperback)
As a lover of Chick Lit, I must say this book has been one of my favorite reads of the summer! A great book to take to the beach, the mountains, or anywhere you go to relax! Fun, light and adventuresome Kathryn Cheet will steal you heart and make you smile!

A great story full of romance, savy tension, and humor. Anna Davis has outdone herself with the tale of a single, cheating, london cab drive! Kathryn is sure to be a character you will remember for a long time to come!

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5.0 out of 5 stars A new kind of romance, July 31, 2003
By 
Michelle L. Cuneo (Boiling Springs, SC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Cheet (Plume Books) (Paperback)
Anna Davis has transformed the world of romance. Cheet is a romantic comedy for the 21st century. We normally see the ups and downs of a relationship or maybe even two relationships in our run of the mill romance novels, but Anna Davis has given our main character Kathryn, five people to have a romantic relationship with. It is comical at times to see our main lady juggle with her many lovers, but we are also subjected to some more serious and dramatic issues that our character has to deal with, and these issues help us to see more into the inner workings of Kathryn. This book was a nice change from modern romance novels and I enjoyed its new perspective very much.You are guaranteed a good read as you follow the main character on her many rendezvous with love.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A new kind of romance, July 31, 2003
By 
Michelle L. Cuneo (Boiling Springs, SC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Cheet (Plume Books) (Paperback)
Anna Davis has transformed the world of romance. Cheet is a romantic comedy for the 21st century. We normally see the ups and downs of a relationship or maybe even two relationships in our run of the mill romance novels, but Anna Davis has given our main character Kathryn, five people to have a romantic relationship with. It is comical at times to see our main lady juggle with her many lovers, but we are also subjected to some more serious and dramatic issues that our character has to deal with, and these issues help us to see more into the inner workings of Kathryn. This book was a nice change from modern romance novels and I enjoyed its new perspective very much.You are guaranteed a good read as you follow the main character on her many rendezvous with love.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great chick book!, July 30, 2003
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This review is from: Cheet (Plume Books) (Paperback)
I had great fun with this book! It's about a woman London cabbie and her adventures in keeping track of five lovers with five different colored cell phones. Super dynamics between Cheet and her lovers, plus a few interesting twists that will keep you guessing until the end. If I wasn't otherwise attached, I'd be tempted to give her lover juggling techniques a try! Again, a great, fun chick book!
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3.0 out of 5 stars A pretty good read for the light-hearted, July 22, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Cheet (Plume Books) (Paperback)
This book features a slightly neurotic young woman cabbie in London who juggles her many lovers by using different colored cell phones. Each lover has their own sub-story and at times it gets difficult to keep them all straight. (Imagine how she must've felt!) The duration of the set-up of the characters was a bit long, but once I got to know each person individually, I found that I was hooked. It then kept me interested and wanting to know more. I liked following her journey to a more stable life, as she learned from each of her experiences. Overall, it's a good read for sitting by the pool or at the beach.
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Cheet (Plume Books)
Cheet (Plume Books) by Anna Davis (Paperback - May 27, 2003)
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