From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
MARY is outrageously fun!,
By
This review is from: The Trouble with Mary (Mass Market Paperback)
Although I'm not much of a cook, I do know a winning recipe when I read one, and THE TROUBLE WITH MARY is simply delightful. When Mary gets a bad review for her new Italian restaurant, she pays a little visit to sportswriter Dan, who is filling in as food critic. He's no Oscar, though, and is immediately attracted to Mary, even when he believes her food has poisoned his son. Though accusations fly initially, Mary and Dan begin to date, and Mary's hopes for finally getting zinged look promising. If only her nosey and noisy family didn't interfere in her life so much. If only Dan weren't so opposed to women working - it's what broke up his marriage. If only Mary weren't so opposed to settling down, which is what Dan determines he wants.Millie Criswell's first single title contemporary romance is lots of fun - Mary's thoughts are often out-and-out hysterical, and the personalities of her mother and klepto grandmother are rendered wonderfully. Dan's son is not the traditional cardboard-cutout-kid so often filling the pages of romance novels. And, the love scenes will tingle down to your toes. While THE TROUBLE WITH MARY is a good read, it's not a great one. Dan's old-fashioned attitude toward women working seems somewhat archaic, and even though he gets past it, it was definitely there. It's hard to pin-point other problems with the book, so I guess it just comes down to this: some books are fun to read, and that's all. For me, fun to read is good enough. If it's good enough for you too, give this one a try. If you do, I think you'll enjoy it, and will look forward to the sequel, featuring Mary's brother, who's a Catholic Father and her best friend, ... Annie. TTFN, Laurie Likes Books Publisher, All About Romance
21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Just the Thing for the Winter doldrums,
This review is from: The Trouble with Mary (Mass Market Paperback)
Have post-holiday letdown? Grab yourself a copy of Millie Criswell's THE TROUBLE WITH MARY, and you won't be down for long. I'd only read a chapter or two before I realized *this* was *my* kind of book. It reads fast, has lots of dialogue, humor, and lovable, quirky and sympathetic characters. I'm sure many of us know people like Mary Russo: approaching the 40 mark, not married, a virgin, and still living with their family [in this case, a large extended Italian family]. Armed with courage and a fledgling spirit of independence, Mary decides to move out of the family home and open her own restaurant. This does not amuse her mother, a staunch matriarch who loves nothing better than to cook and plot out her children's lives. Enter Dan Gallagher: Irish, single dad, sports writer and fill-in food/restaurant critic with a vocal aversion to Italian food. His 'review' of Mary's restaurant, "Mama Sophia's," throws the two together for the first time as Mary decides to pay the tastebud-less critic a visit to set him straight. What it does is set off a chain of events the formidable Sophia and the whole Russo family are powerless to stop. I'm from a very small family and just the thought of getting involved with a family as large, vocal and nosy as Mary's gives me hives. Dan not only perseveres, but he and his son, Matt, thrive in an atmosphere painted with compassion and [by the author's admission] accuracy. It's so darn gratifying to read a contemporary novel with slightly older hero and heroine in which the couple can have spirited banter without the woman coming off as an airhead and the guy as one step above a fruit fly in IQ. I simply refuse to read about Neanderthal heroes with testosterone overload, who think it's jolly good fun to rattle off obscenities, treat the heroine like dirt, and indulge in endless tasteless humor. Those of us who prefer a sophisticated brand of humor will appreciate THE TROUBLE WITH MARY, a blue-ribbon winner for Millie Criswell. I'm already anticipating Annie's book in August 2001.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A read to bring smiles and laughter,
By
This review is from: The Trouble with Mary (Mass Market Paperback)
THE TROUBLE WITH MARY Millie Criswell Ivy Books ISBN #0-804-11950-3 January 2001 ContemporaryBaltimore - Present Mary Russo is a middle child born into a stereotype Italian family where the matriarch reminds me of Sophia of The Golden Girls TV show. Sophia Russo always has a one liner to divulge and it often begins with - The trouble with Mary is ..... to fit whatever the occasion happens to be at the moment. Thanks to many of these isms, Mary believes herself a fat failure. She dropped out of school to work in a Pizza Parlor and now her boss is dead and she doesn't have a clue where or what she wants to do. Loving to cook and deciding to venture out on her own, Mary finds a new apartment over the same building where she opens an Italian restaurant in Baltimore's Little Italy section of town. She looks forward to a thriving business, but the newspaper's food editor blasts her restaurant with a terrible critique. Just wait till that Dan Gallagher, whoever he thinks he is, gets a piece of her mind! Dan Gallagher was a successful sports editor for the newspaper, but nepotism enters the picture and he's asked to fill a vacancy as food editor for a spell. Dan isn't happy, but doesn't have much choice either. Dan hates Italian food and must review the new restaurant opening in Little Italy, and blasts it with a terrible critique. He has set an Italian family against him and little Mary Russo is going to burn his ears when she walks into his office a few days later. But when Dan looks at the petite woman it's more than his ears that burn. Millie Criswell steps into the arena of contemporary writing with a blast, as THE TROUBLE WITH MARY is a riot of romantic comedy. She gives readers a story to laugh with and brings a family to life when a typical Italian daughter falls for of all things, an Irishman. Dan and Mary are such fun to read about as they become friends, then lovers. Her secondary characters seem like relatives after you read a few chapters. There is the colorful Grandma Flora who never lets Sophia forget she wasn't good enough for her son, Frank, but no woman could have met Flora's expectations. The aunts and uncles and their idiosyncrasies will keep a smile on your face with their antics. Then there is Dan's precious little boy, Matthew, who doesn't want to live with Dan and is angry because his mother deserted him, but Grandma Flora and Mary will soon bring him out of the doldrums. Then, there is Mary's brother, Joe, a priest and light of his mother's eyes; and Annie, the outrageous best friend, among other characters presented. Each of the cast is fully developed and given a unique personality. Though most of the story is a comedy, there are some serious matters hidden between the lines, and the author does a great job in solving them. Mary harbors a real fear of failure in her relationship and hesitates to commit because of that fear. She's also been under her mother's thumb all of her life and enjoys her independence and doesn't want to give that up. Dan was been burned in his first marriage and isn't interested in anything more than a casual relationship - but Mary's family will have more than a little to say about that. THE TROUBLE WITH MARY is a read to pick up when you want to lift your spirits and put a smile on your face. Millie Criswell proves she can write a contemporary to equal her previous historicals as she uses imagination, wit and humor to bring a delightful story to her fans. There are steam-filled pages of sensuality as the thirty-something virgin learns about making out. This reader is hoping there is a sequel to bring this family to a conclusion since I have a strong need to know more about brother Joe. Millie Criswell left me with a grin and a satisfying conclusion to a tale I highly recommend. Carol Carter/As written for Under The Covers
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