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Citizen Girl
 
 
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Citizen Girl [Paperback]

Nicola Kraus (Author)
2.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (224 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 21, 2005
Working in a world where a college degree qualifies her to make photocopies and color-coordinate file folders, twenty-four year old girl is struggling to keep up with the essential trinity of food, shelter, and student loans. So when she finally lands the job of her dreams she ignores her misgivings and concentrates on getting the job done! whatever that may be. Sharply observed and devastatingly funny, "Citizen Girl" captures with biting accuracy what it means to be young and female in the new economy. A personal glimpse into an impersonal world, "Citizen Girl" is edgy and heartfelt, an entertaining read that is startlingly relevant.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Citizen Girl is the sophomore effort from Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus, whose Nanny Diaries sent Park Avenue mothers running for cover and catapulted the duo to cult-like status amongst gossip literature's elite. This time around, our heroine is Girl, a twentysomething women's studies major whose liberal arts education led her to believe that saving women from worldwide oppression was as easy as reporting for duty at her local feminist non-profit. As Girl soon learns, no job is ever as it seems, and even the director of the Center for Equity in Community is not free from manipulating her staff in order to get ahead. As we follow Girl through unemployment and an eventual position as the Director of Rebranding Knowledge Acquisition for My Company, McLaughlin and Kraus invite readers on a raucous journey though the ups and downs of early 21st Century corporate life.

While at times disjointed and overly crass, Citizen Girl certainly has its moments. Most post-grad women will be able to identify with Girl on at least some level, whether it be returning to Career Services with her tail between her legs or forgiving her boyfriend for hiring a stripper at his best friend's bachelor party. ("I turn to find Buster slumped on my front stoop, soaked to the skin behind a proffered bouquet of hopeful white tulips.")

Some readers may tire of Girl's particular combination of naiveté and idealism after the first 50 pages, and the blatant stereotypes may wear thin after a while (Girl's boss at My Company is named Guy, and the woman they hire to turn things around is called Manley). Still, Girl's story is intriguing enough that by the end of the book, most of us will be rooting for her as she negotiates her way through the tumultuous battlefield that often is corporate America. --Gisele Toueg --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

McLaughlin and Kraus (The Nanny Diaries) are back with another tale of woe featuring a 20-something New Yorker searching for a way out of her miserable life. This hyperventilating satire features Girl, an ambitious feminist whose well-known girl-empowering boss saddles Girl with the worst tasks, steals her ideas and finally cans her for speaking out. After a desperate search, Girl is hired for a dream job with a matching dream salary. As the Director of Rebranding Knowledge Acquisition for My Company, she doesn't exactly know what she's supposed to do, but it involves dodgy activities with her boss and being made over to fit in with a new California client. "You're lucky to even be here.... We're about to buy you a few thousand dollars' worth of suits. So just go try on the Goddamn bikini.... Honey, what're ya gonna do about the bush?" As work goes from bad to worse, the only light in Girl's tunnel is Buster—a sweet boy/man who creates video games for a living and who fluctuates between fleeing Girl and being there for her. But when a new boss takes My Company into a whole new darker direction (think sex industry), Girl is forced to make a decision between morals and money. Though witty and biting in spots, this bitter tale is too schematic and strident to be much fun.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Clearway Logistics Phase 10-12 (April 21, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0141014016
  • ISBN-13: 978-0141014012
  • Product Dimensions: 7.7 x 4.8 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 2.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (224 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #7,860,549 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

224 Reviews
5 star:
 (32)
4 star:
 (16)
3 star:
 (23)
2 star:
 (38)
1 star:
 (115)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
2.2 out of 5 stars (224 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

25 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not THAT bad, and definitely not worse than Nanny Diaries., July 8, 2005
By 
Kharabella "Kharabella" (Somewhere in the midwest . . .) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Citizen Girl (Hardcover)
I actually give it three and a half stars. At first, I had a hard time getting into it, as I had a hard time getting into The Nanny Diaires. The world of these heroines -- responsible WASP girls from private prep schools trying to do dubious good in New England -- isn't a world that I know, or that I have a lot of patience for. But I understand what they are trying to say. So I have to say that most of these reviews are WAY too harsh.

The problem with Citizen Girl isn't that its bad. The writing is just as short, psuedo-clever, and sparse on the details and descriptions as Nanny Diaries. But I think it's the subject matter probably makes even readers of (so-called) chick lit uncomfortable. It's about feminism, and how hard it is for an intelligent, well-meaning young woman to try to make a living out of making the world a better place for women. It's about how varied and twisted the meaning of "feminism" has become. It's about what happens when you just stand by and allow things that you don't agree with to happen just so that you can make money. Girl, the heroine in this book, puts up with a lot of crap with the hope of hopefully doing something positive in the end. The more insults and mistreatment that she puts up with, the more money that she makes. She's motivated both by her need to get a steady paycheck and by her wish to do something positive at the end of the day. She works for a horrible company and is relentlessly used, exploited, and insulted. The work that she does goes against everything (feminist) that she believes in, but she stays with it largely because she hopes that if she does the work the company will make good on its promise to make a HUGE charitable donation to a non-profit women's organization. Plus, the economy is bad and she needs a steady paycheck.

Most of the women that I know who read these types of books don't consider themselves feminists -- the word is scary and uncomfortable and somehow implies to them that feminism isn't feminine and that it means that they can't wear lip gloss or cook for their boyfriend. Honestly, this book doesn't do much to allay that silly misconception, but it puts all the types and stereotypes out there. For most of the characters in this book, feminism is more of a jargon and a marketing strategy than a cause. And Girl is expected to let everything slide and ignore the way that the world she's living in, working in, spending money in, is negatively impacting women. Honestly, it's a good point and a worthy discussion. But it isn't as glamourous a subject as rich ladies and their spoiled children.

I don't see what the other reviewers were so suprised about in the language. I found nothing offensive about the language at all, but I am an urban girl. I think the book could have been better written, but it didn't suck. And I say that as an actual feminist with a strong addiction to lip gloss.
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50 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing--worlds removed from The Nanny Diaries, November 19, 2004
This review is from: Citizen Girl (Hardcover)
I loved The Nanny Diaries, both for the style and the subject, and was eagerly looking forward to the authors' second book. I bought Citizen Girl without even reading a page, expecting to love it just as much. Unfortunately, I was disappointed. While Ms. McLaughlin and Ms. Krauss's unique style is intact, the writing and editing are somewhat less stellar than TND, and with a lot of unnecessary profanity added to the mix. (It's not that I am a prude--I've been known to cuss a blue streak when the situation warrants it--but the authors seem to be under the mistaken impression that lots of [...] and even a few [...] will give their writing "edge". It doesn't. It just makes the book sound like it was written by a teenager trying to shock someone.) The main character is unsymapathetic and rather annoying, as is her love interest. The plot is convoluted and weirdly dark. Maybe this actually is a good representation of a young woman trying to make her way in New York today, but I had trouble relating at all. I plan to return my copy of the book after plowing through about half of it, and then finally skipping to the end.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Huge Disappointment, May 8, 2006
By 
Mary Wallace (Wilmington, NC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Citizen Girl (Paperback)
I read this book for the simple reason that I liked "The Nanny Diaries" and figured that it would be worth the read, even if it wasn't quite as good. I was tremendously incorrect. I don't know how this book even got published. The bland names, "Girl" "Guy", etc, made the characters far too one dimensional for me to become invested in the story. Also, there were a lot of elements that simply didn't fit into the story and were too over the top. The funny thing is, the over the top elements were incredible uninteresting and so they didn't even add excitement to the storyline. The sole reason that I kept reading the book to the end was that I had myself convinced that the story was gonna pick up and get exciting "any page now." That simply didn't happen. What a huge disappointment. The authors, their agent, their editor and their publisher were sorely misguided on this one.
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The ladies' room door squeaks open and I stop breathing, jerking my feet up on the toilet seat lid in an effort to work through my lunch hour in solitude. Read the first page
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New York, Chicks Gone Senseless, Vice President, Doris Weintruck, Jed Devlin, Julia Gilman, Long Island, Career Services, Krispy Kreme, Bella Russe, Big Five, Gloria Steinem, Hair Gel Man, Seline Saybrook, Speak-Out Room, Fun Company, Girlie Girl, Hello Kitty, Man Ray, Nanette Lepore, Palm Pilot, Sixth Avenue, Slipper Room
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