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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Log On
Ex-socialite Avery Nesbitt is a computer genius with a serious case of agoraphobia. Avery conducts her social life completely online, and has been living alone and secluded for over 8 years. Avery suffers from a host of maladies, including bad nutrition, paranoia, and fear of her family. Because of a past incident, Avery was disowned by her family, so she spends her time...
Published on November 27, 2005 by Butterscotch

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Funny romantic suspense
After spending time in jail for creating the mother of all computer viruses in vengeance for a bad break up, Avery has become a bit of a recluse and corresponds with an on-line lover who she soon finds cyber cheating on her. Soon she is back to her old tricks creating viruses and captures the attention of the Office of Political Unity and Security (OPUS). OPUS agent Dixon...
Published on May 17, 2007 by Tracy Vest


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Log On, November 27, 2005
This review is from: You've Got Male (Mass Market Paperback)
Ex-socialite Avery Nesbitt is a computer genius with a serious case of agoraphobia. Avery conducts her social life completely online, and has been living alone and secluded for over 8 years. Avery suffers from a host of maladies, including bad nutrition, paranoia, and fear of her family. Because of a past incident, Avery was disowned by her family, so she spends her time making friends and lovers online. It turns out that one of Avery's online `lovers' is a man who is wanted by OPUS - an elite crime squad. In order to get more information about Avery's online lover (Andrew/Adrian), an OPUS agent named Dixon invades Avery's home and privacy for the duration of his mission. The mission takes them to the Hamptons, where they pursue Andrew/Adrian and their own budding romance. The romance is fun and engaging, the characters are interesting, and the plot maintains a steady pace and keeps you interested. As with most Elizabeth Bevarly romances, the secondary plot/romance is almost as interesting as the main romance. In this case, the subplot involves the romance between 20something "Cowboy" (Dixon's partner), and 40something Carly (Avery's sister). I enjoyed the stories very much and look forward to the next book in the series.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars YOU'VE GOT a great book!, October 15, 2005
This review is from: You've Got Male (Mass Market Paperback)
I loved this book! I think one of my favorite things about Elizabeth Beverly's books is that she's just so smart. The pop culture references always make me feel smarter and younger because I "get" all of her jokes. I was also caught off guard by the depth of emotion in this book. Avery was a very touching heroine who won my empathy from the very first page. And Dixon was really hot! If you like humor mixed with some tenderness and a little dollop of suspense, you'll love "You've Got Male"! (And I'm kind of fascianted by bad guy mystery man Adrian. Hope he gets his own book!)
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Anything goes in cyberspace, October 11, 2005
This review is from: You've Got Male (Mass Market Paperback)
The Bastard! Avery Nesbitt thinks when she catches Andrew cheating online with another woman. She has fallen passionately in love with him and now she finds Andrew doing it with some other woman! How dare the Bastard! Avery decides to make him pay for it. She turns to her laptop and as "Daisy" starts making Andrew a present that will pay him back for his cheating. After much hard work creating a computer virus, Avery is feeling hungry, so she calls the local neighborhood store to get a delivery of food.

Dixon had been watching "Daisy" for a week and so far he had not been able to get through the firewall on her computer or the filter on her phone. Dixon suspects "Daisy" since she has been writing to a well known criminal called "The Sorcerer," aka Andrew. When Dixon hears her requesting a delivery from the local market she reveals her real name, confirming her actual address. Dixon intercepts the grocery delivery and delivers it himself. Avery meets him at the door wearing glasses and frumpy clothes which hide all her assets. While in her apartment Dixon sees a potent computer virus displayed on her laptop computer. He decides that he needs to check into her background more.

After Dixon discusses the information with his superior, The One Whose Name Nobody Dare Say, he is ordered to bring her in immediately. When Avery is brought in for questioning, they threaten to put her back in jail unless she helps capture Andrew. What is a girl to do? The orders are for her to go back to her parents home and be there as they lay the trap. So what if they have banished her from the family because she went to prison? Avery had been caught releasing a computer virus that almost destroyed the World, especially Greenland and The Pope. Avery resists having cyber sex with Andrew online as part of the trap, but relents thinking its Dixon that she is writing to. And OHHHH how the sparks fly between Avery and Dixon.

You've Got Male by Elizabeth Beverly is a totally wacky story. It has tongue-in-cheek references to all the spy innuendos you may have ever read or seen. Ms. Beverly makes repetitive redundancy an art form all her own. Ms Beverly's story is a tad bit overdone in many areas. However, the characters are zany and hilarious as they interact. You've Got Male shows that cyberspace can be a place where just about anything goes.

Gene
Reviewed for Joyfully Reviewed
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Funny romantic suspense, May 17, 2007
By 
This review is from: You've Got Male (Mass Market Paperback)
After spending time in jail for creating the mother of all computer viruses in vengeance for a bad break up, Avery has become a bit of a recluse and corresponds with an on-line lover who she soon finds cyber cheating on her. Soon she is back to her old tricks creating viruses and captures the attention of the Office of Political Unity and Security (OPUS). OPUS agent Dixon is hot on the trail of the Sorcerer, a former fellow agent gone rogue who seems to be soliciting a virus, and he suspects that Sorcerer is contacting his female quarry for nefarious deeds.

Dixon gets her name and address from an on-line grocery request, and acts as the delivery man, only to discover that Avery is indeed creating a virus. After discussing it with the director, arrangements are made for Avery to return to her estranged family's estate. Dixon returns to take her into custody, unaware of the reaction an agoraphobic has to leaving their comfortable environs, and the family estate turns out to be a very unwelcome sanctuary. As Dixon finds himself falling for his charge, he wants to protect her from both the Sorcerer and the family which doesn't appreciate her.

Bevarly takes the cultural phenomenon of on line romance and gives her own spin to it, resulting in a unique and funny romantic suspense. A secondary May-December romance with Dixon's young partner Tanner and Avery's older and spoiled sister Carly adds additional zing to the storyline. Followed up with "Express Male."
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5.0 out of 5 stars Elizabeth Bevarly is back!, April 22, 2008
This review is from: You've Got Male (Mass Market Paperback)
I'd stopped reading Ms. Bevarly for a while because the books had become almost a parody of her distinctive writing style. She's toned that down so it's again humorous not intrusive and teamed that with a great heroine and a funny plot.

I really, really enjoyed this book and look forward to the 2nd and 3rd books.
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5.0 out of 5 stars wonderful romantic suspense, September 28, 2005
This review is from: You've Got Male (Mass Market Paperback)
Former convict Avery "Viral Avery" Nesbitt suffers from agoraphobia so since she left prison eight years ago she has never ventured outside from her New York condo. The computer genius uses the Internet for everything including on-line relationships especially Andrew until she learns he is cheating on her in other chat rooms. Irate she plans to feed him a virus like none that anyone has seen before.

Federal Office for Political Unity and Security Agent Dixon realizes that Avery's Andrew is the cyber-terrorist the Sorcerer. With her history of creating a computer virus that crippled the Internet ten years ago, he believes she is in cahoots with this brilliant madman. He wants to bring her in but she goes bongos with anxiety. As he forces her out into the real world and uses her as bait to reel in the Sorcerer, Dixon falls in love with the PJ-clad geek, but to persuade her they belong together even if he only sees her in her condo proves to be as tough assignment as he ever tried to solve.

Avery is a unique heroine, estranged from her family since her conviction while struggling to cope with surviving without going outside. Her phobia is brilliantly handled with dexterity with her savior being the Internet that enables her to live by herself in Manhattan. The story line focuses predominantly on her and her growing relationship with Dixon. A subplot involving her sister whom she has not spoken with in a decade, and Dixon's partner is an intriguing opposites-matched with her being much older too; hopefully that twist will continue in a follow up tale. Elizabeth Bevarly provides a wonderful romantic suspense thriller starring a fabulous cast.

Harriet Klausner

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Repetitive, cutesy, weak plot, June 28, 2006
This review is from: You've Got Male (Mass Market Paperback)
This is the second Bevarly I've read, and it will be the last. "Just Like A Man" was repetitive, cutesy rather than funny, the plotting was weak, and the characters were elaborately described but not 3-dimensional. I thought Bevarly had potential to do better. After reading "You've Got Male", I give up. The two books were nearly identical - formulaic as well as repetitive.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars You've Got Male, October 10, 2005
This review is from: You've Got Male (Mass Market Paperback)
To stop in internet terrorist's scheme, Dixon masquerades as a grocery delivery man to get inside Avery Nesbitt's home. With her history of virus creation and her tie to said terrorist, she is dangerous. The look Dixon gets of her computer scares him to death. Once she unleashed a virus that shut down the world, and the one he sees being designed is far worse. He has to reel her in, but hadn't counted on the fact that she is agoraphobic. She agrees to help him stop the man who was planning on using her, so she can go home and find peace. What Avery never anticiapated was how much Dixon would disturb her peace and how safe that disturbance would feel.

*** The light that is shone on Avery's affliction makes this a worthwhile read without the compelling plot. However, with the timely plot, it makes it more than worth your time, it makes this book a winner. ***

Reviewed by Amanda Killgore, Freelance Reviewer.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars If you MUST read it - borrow it!, November 28, 2005
This review is from: You've Got Male (Mass Market Paperback)
Not really a badly written book but the secret government agency aspects are just dumb, right down to the silly nicknames. I won't avoid Elizabeth Bevarly just because of this book but I will look further than a catchy title before laying out full price for one
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not usual romance cheese, April 4, 2006
This review is from: You've Got Male (Mass Market Paperback)
I liked the sarcasm in this book because, let's face it, these days everyone is sarcastic. I liked that the romance in this book wasn't super cheese like the romance of my mother's day. You know what I am talking about. The ones that leave women looking like dumb, weak victims that need the big strong man to survive.

If you look past the gov. agency (which was a bit cheesy) and don't get too technical on computer stuff (because it isn't always accurate and is stretched a little to work for the author for the sake of story line, which the average person wouldn't even notice) it was a good, contemporary book. Written in this era, this society, not some throbbing manhood, please help me; I'm just a girl, world.
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You've Got Male
You've Got Male by Elizabeth Bevarly (Mass Market Paperback - October 1, 2005)
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