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Some Girls: My Life in a Harem Audio CD – CD, August 3, 2010
Purchase options and add-ons
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTantor Audio
- Publication dateAugust 3, 2010
- Dimensions6.4 x 1.1 x 5.3 inches
- ISBN-101400118786
- ISBN-13978-1400118786
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Product details
- Publisher : Tantor Audio; Unabridged CD edition (August 3, 2010)
- Language : English
- ISBN-10 : 1400118786
- ISBN-13 : 978-1400118786
- Item Weight : 7.5 ounces
- Dimensions : 6.4 x 1.1 x 5.3 inches
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Jillian Lauren is a writer, storyteller, adoption advocate, rock-wife, and lousy kickboxer. She is the New York Times bestselling author of the memoirs EVERYTHING YOU EVER WANTED, and SOME GIRLS: My Life in a Harem, and the novel PRETTY. SOME GIRLS, which recounts her time spent in the harem of the Prince of Brunei, has been translated into eighteen languages.
She was the only journalist to extensively interview Samuel Little, the most prolific serial killer in American history. This experience is chronicled in Joe Berlinger’s hit STARZ documentary series, CONFRONTING A SERIAL KILLER, and in Michael Connelly’s podcast MURDER BOOK: The Women Who Brought Down Samuel Little.
Her latest book, a USA Today bestseller, BEHOLD THE MONSTER: Confronting a Killer, depicts a harrowing report of Jillain’s unusual relationship with a psychopath. But this is more than a deep dive into the actions of Samuel Little. Lauren's riveting and emotional accounts reveal the women who were lost to cold files, giving Little's victims a chance to have their stories heard for the first time.
Jillian has an MFA in Creative Writing from Antioch University. Her writing has appeared in New York Magazine, The New York Times, Vanity Fair, The Paris Review, The Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Magazine, Elle, Flaunt Magazine, The Daily Beast, Salon, and many others. Her work has been widely anthologized, including in The Moth Anthology, and True Tales of Lust and Love.
Jillian is a regular storyteller with The Moth and performs at spoken word and storytelling events across the country. She did a Tedx talk about adoption and identity at Chapman University in 2014. She has been interviewed on The View, Good Morning America and Howard Stern, to name a few.
Jillian is married to Weezer bass player Scott Shriner. They live in Los Angeles with their two sons.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the writing style well-written, honest, and simple. They also describe the content as interesting, easy-going, enjoyable, and tawdry. However, some find the storyline boring, uninteresting, disjointed, and hard to follow.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book interesting, amazing, and fun. They also say it holds their attention the whole time, and the details about the harem life are fascinating. Readers describe the book as easy-going, enjoyable, and tawdry. They appreciate the author's unique and creative way of using words.
"This was a great read. I was expecting it to be a typical, trashy "tell all" about exploits as a prince's mistress, but it was SO much more...." Read more
"...While there is no closure, the book is a fast read, providing at least some measure of satisfaction to more reluctant readers." Read more
"Titillating, tawdry and touching -- what a vivid combination...." Read more
"...If you have never heard a harem story, read this one. It is very typical harem story...." Read more
Customers find the writing style well-written, honest, and raw. They also say the book is well-put together, simple, and clear.
"...Jillian's book however is incredibly candid and self analytical (you can tell she's VERY intelligent), while still giving juicy details about life..." Read more
"...I find her writing easy to read. It is simple and clear...." Read more
"...Your humble honesty, so raw and real, about the jagged-edged struggles of finding yourself, making your own way against the harsh backdrop of regret..." Read more
"...and sophisticated, yet when I began reading, I found the writing style almost juvenile and simplistic--telling, not showing...." Read more
Customers find the humor in the book funny, witty, and smart.
"...Jillian Lauren's writing is funny and descriptive and she takes the reader right along with her to the other end of the earth..." Read more
"...The topic of the book was not so great, but the writing was great.I did something I've never done before...." Read more
"...This gal is a good writer. Witty,smart and funny...." Read more
"It is written quite well and while it is a book you can put down, it does leave you wanting to know what happens." Read more
Customers find the storyline boring, unrealistic, and disjointed. They also say the book is choppy and hard to follow. Readers also mention that the book has too much about the author's life and not enough about the actual title.
"...It was somewhat choppy, with undeveloped characters (including her own) and timing that didn't quite make sense...." Read more
"...She did a great job selling her memoir, but the book itself was a disappointment. In retrospect, this is true to her form...." Read more
"...Too long, to much about her life, and not enough about the actual title of the book." Read more
"...; I'm giving it 3 stars because yes, I felt it was "okay" - unimpressive, but okay." Read more
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Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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I find her writing easy to read. It is simple and clear.
She is smart woman who was able to attend college while her peers were still in high school. In my own bias opinion, she is pretty, based on the picture of her on the back of the book.
Jillian drops out of college. She works as a stripper and later a call-girl. She is offered $20,000 to go to the small country of Brunei to party for a few weeks. This sounds dangerous, which adds excitement to her story. She realizes that she is part of a harem for the prince. There are groups of women from several countries there.
I'm at the middle-point in the book. I want to find out what happens. She gets out of the country alive because she has written this book.
I wonder what type of wisdom she has to share about her experience. The back of the book says she "emerges from the secret Xanadu both richer and wiser."
Glad I haven't read all of the book prior to writing this review so I don't give away the secrets and the ending.
Review by Danny Pettry
Author of: Discover Hidden Secret Wisdom.
Discover Hidden Secret Wisdom: A Recreational Therapist's System on How You Can Become Great at Anything (Volume 1)
Written in the style of most-modern day memoirs, Some Girls: My Life in a Harem, opens on the scene of the author's troubled childhood and ill relations with her father. After feeling she has failed as an actress and living with limited resources after being cut off from her finances due to her dropping out of college, she follows a lead from a friend after working with an "escort service" which in turn swallows her up into the life of a "harem girl", even though in no way is the harem officially reported.
Reading like a mid-day soap opera, the story continues as the author finds herself in the prince's favor, only later to escape back to the states into a world of abortions, drugs, and experimental theater. After finding her funds are running short once again, she returns to Brunei, only to realize she has fallen out of her position of power and replaced by the ever increasing flow of newcomers. However, the Lauren only describes this piece of history rather briefly, almost as if something important has been removed.
The book closes on the Lauren's realization of what is normal and how history yet repeats itself--as seen with the adoption of her Ethiopian son. However, the continuous "fallout" of her time in the prince's harem that the author alludes to throughout--embezzlement of funds, evening gossip news exposure, etc.--are hardly discussed, instead quickly cutting to the epilogue of the life she currently lives now.
I had originally picked this book up through a recommendation in Marie Claire as the author interview sounded savvy and sophisticated, yet when I began reading, I found the writing style almost juvenile and simplistic--telling, not showing. The author continuously portrays herself as a victim to her circumstances, alternating between blaming herself using a cliched woe-is-me-technique and her mental instabilities.
While the book preaches self-redemption and coming of age, I found very little of such in the author's experience. Lauren constantly puts herself down and emphasizes her worthlessness as a woman instead of embracing her femininity. Even at the book's completion, I was left with the sense that the author still has many unresolved issues to see through to the end, leaving a horribly bitter taste in my mouth. There is no closure.
The redeeming feature of this book shines deep in the narrative technique, using almost a rough, "bad-girl" leather and studs slang, which comes off as a refreshing change from most feminine narratives, if at times a little a crude and overused.
While this book was not for me, I do recommend it as a lazy summer day, throw-away read--though nothing more than that. While there is no closure, the book is a fast read, providing at least some measure of satisfaction to more reluctant readers.
Top reviews from other countries
I have to say I was very disappointed in it......and found myself disliking the author and the life she led, which was weird as I liked her in the documentary, so I like the woman she has become. This book is not very well written, and that awful hedonistic life in Brunei - UGH!



![[(Some Girls : My Life in a Harem)] [By (author) Jillian Lauren] published on (April, 2010)](https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51P3OFl6pIL._AC_UL165_SR165,165_.jpg)

