‘Book Reviews’

The Book of Vice

The Book of ViceThe Book of Vice: Very Naughty Things (And How To Do Them), by Peter Sagal, takes a look at seven vices: 1) Swinging or Dinner Parties Gone Horribly Wrong; 2) Eating or Sodom’s Restaurant; 3) Strip Clubs or Sure, They Like You. Really.; 4) Lying or This Chapter Will Change Your Life and Make You Millions!; 5) Gambling or Dice, Cards, Wheels, and Other Lethal Weapons; 6) Consumption or How to Keep Up with the Joneses When the Joneses Are Insane; and 7) Pornography or You Can Look, but You Can’t Admit It.

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You Can’t Have Him – He’s Mine

 

You Can’t Have Him – He’s Mine: A Woman’s Guide to Affair-Proofing Her Relationship, written by Marie H. Browne, R.N. Ph.D., with Marlene M. Browne, Esq., is a survival guide for women dealing with cheating spouses. Whether you’re ready to kick him to the curb or fighting to keep him, take the time to read this book before making any major decisions or confronting him or his cheatmate. If you’re the betrayed wife, you actually probably have the upper hand; learn how to use it to your advantage. This isn’t a fun read but neither is adultery.

Stripped


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Stripped is Brian Freeman’s second novel, a murder mystery set in Las Vegas. Detectives Jonathan Stride and Serena Dial, from Freeman’s debut novel, Immoral, are working on separate murders that end up being linked to a brutal crime from the past. It’s a race against time to try to stop a serial killer from killing again. There are plenty of twists and unexpected turns in this very fast-paced thriller. Before reading Stripped, I’d never heard of Brian Freeman. Now, he’s definitely one of my favorite mystery writers.

Mademoiselle Victorine

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Mademoiselle Victorine: A Novel, written by Debra Finerman, is a fictionalized accounting of historical events in 1860s Paris. Victorine, the lead character, is less than a courtesan but more than a streetwalker. She uses her physical beauty and sexual skills to work her way through the upper levels of Parisian society in her quest for rich men, married or not. I couldn’t find anything to like about such a self-absorbed and shallow character, but I thoroughly enjoyed Finerman’s depth of detail throughout the book. I felt that if I closed my eyes I would actually be in that period of time.

How To Heal Toxic Thoughts

Sandra Ingerman is the author of the psycho-spiritual self-help book How to Heal Toxic Thoughts: Simple Tools for Personal Transformation. The book contains short exercises for readers to do to help create positive energy in their lives. Click on the video link above for my review.

How To Survive Your Husband’s Midlife Crisis

In 2003, Perigee, a division of Penguin/Putnam, published How to Survive Your Husband’s Midlife Crisis: Strategies and Stories from the Midlife Wives Club. Gay Courter and I wrote the book. To date, the book has been translated into Chinese and Polish.

Daisy Dooley Does Divorce

Daisy Dooley Does Divorce is a chick-lit novel by Anna Pasternak. Daisy Dooley is 39 and divorced after leaving a three year marriage, her first. Now, as her biological clock ticks madly away, she’s back living at home with her ditzy mother who raises dachsunds and taking another plunge into the dating pool. Daisy is British which means “shag” is not a hairstyle nor is “sod” something that covers the front lawn.

The Man I Should Have Married

After Sunny’s middle-aged husband ends their marriage by running off with an old high school sweetheart, Sunny wonders if there’s anyone from her past who would have the same effect on her. Author Pamela Redmond Satran’s book The Man I Should Have Married begins with a divorce and ends with a marriage. The middle of the book tells how it all happened. Read more »

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