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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Cute but stretched out..., August 7, 2004
This was a really good book. Some parts of the plot were so obvious,but only occur in the last 5 pages or so. Like others have said,I think that Ruby's adoption was just a way to lengthen the story,because once I got to that part,it went really slow. I didn't really see the relation between that and the whole idea of the book. I would have loved to cut out some of the adoption parts and have seen more of what happens to Lou in the end! There's only about one sentence that refers to her and the guy she ended up with but that's all. Besides that,it is a good read,and I like how it's essentially 3 stories in one (Ruby's,Lou's and Martin's).
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Just average, August 10, 2007
Perennial singles and best pals Ruby, Lou, and Martin attend yet another wedding where Ruby commiserates on her lack of love life. When they discuss that the bride and groom met through a personal ad, a brainstorm is born - they'll write ads for each other, weed out the creeps, and find the perfect mate for a friend. Ruby will write for Lou; Lou write for Martin, and Martin will write for Ruby. But no one is good enough for Ruby in Martin's eyes. Nursing a crush on her (and she on him), he vetoes most of the folks that respond to the ad. Fearing that they would spoil their friendship, neither has acted on their feelings. Ruby does her best to find the mysterious person Lou exchanged wayward glances with on the crowded train. Lou knows that the person Ruby picked is not the one from the train, but continues to see him, finding that he is annoying perfect boyfriend material. Manby's modern dating tale is lacking in many respects. For the most part is it pretty predictable, though Lou's admission at the end was a little bit of a surprise. Ruby's character is too desperate, making the reader wonder what has Martin tied up in knots. It also has some pretty glaring errors, the biggest being Manby's attributing "The Pina Colada Song" to the wrong artist (it was performed by two-hit-wonder Rupert Holmes, not Barry Manilow). Manby missed the boat on this one - it could have been so much better had she injected some humor and less pathos into the story. Other than that, it is just an average read that I recommend you pick up at the library. My copy is headed for the charity bin.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Flat out hilarious, December 21, 2004
This is one of those books that hooks you from the first sentence and has you turning the pages in a flurry. Martin, Lou and Ruby are all useless at picking partners so place personal ads for each other with hilarious results. Martin is a loveable, sweet, very realistic character and you root for him all the way in his quest for love and personal fulfillment. Lou and Ruby have their own complex hang ups - everyone will be able to relate. There are so many reasons this book is fantastic but the main one is it is madly funny. It made me laugh out loud on the subway, on the bus, in a cafe. It is spot on, well observed, pee in your pants hilarious. Funnier than Marian Keyes and all the other chick lit pretenders. This is the real McCoy.
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