Helpful Score: 4
Not the best written Chick Lit book, but the story was interesting and I really enjoyed it. Sam loses her diary in New York and it totally lost. Ben finds it and decides he wants to meet the author. Lies get told and things get messy. The ending is satisfying though.
Helpful Score: 2
Fun but ludacris chick lit lite.
Helpful Score: 1
Great story! Very witty and fun. I laughed many times out loud. I will read more of her work.
Helpful Score: 1
How would you feel if your personal diary was left in a drawer in a New York hotel and the next occupant found it and thoroughtly enjoyed reading it? Adorable story - love from a different angle is always refreshing!
Helpful Score: 1
Could not get into this and gave up on finishing it.
Wonderful book. Enjoyed very much.
Type-A super lawyer Samantha Washington accidently leaves her diary in a hotel room and discovers that the "finder" is a "keeper".
Good Red Dress Ink book detailing what happens when Sam leaves her diary in London and it is found by a very intrigued man who goes off to find her and return the diary to her.
Sam loses her diary; Ben finds it. After returning it, Ben realizes he wants to get to know the woman behind the book.
this is a great bathtub read, a london lawyer leaves her diary in a new york hotel room and it ends up in the hands of a handsome man who falls in love with her page after page...
This is a novel about losing a diary and finding a soul mate. London lawyer Sam Washington accidentally leaves her diary in a New York hotel room, where it is found by TV producer Ben Fisher - who turns up on her doorstep.
Sam Washington, the beautiful but tightly wound heroine of this cute confection, is the "Queen of Control," marching along the partnership treadmill at her London law firm, her love life reduced to fending off a senior partner's advances. Unlike her friends-cheerfully promiscuous Gemma, fellow lawyer EJ, and blissfully betrothed Sophie-she has abandoned flings, commitment and getting close. Enter wild-card Ben, scruffy-sexy producer of dubious television documentaries like the lingerie-model expos-Storm in a D Cup, who finds and reads Sam's lost diary. Is Ben smitten by this glimpse into Sam's soul, or does he want to turn her embarrassing secrets into a reality show? Sigaloff (Name and Address Withheld) expertly situates this fictional imbroglio on the Bridget Jones's Diary/Sex in the City plane, as Sam endures the humiliations and glamour of 30-ish singletonism, assisted by a gaggle of gal-pals who lunch, shop and spa their way through obstacles. Serious issues, like her father's lung cancer, occasionally surface, but are kept firmly yoked to the mission of helping her get her groove back. Sam can seem self-involved, and the narrative sometimes creaks with crossed signals and missed connections, but an appealing cast of characters, sprightly dialogue and a charming comic touch will keep readers turning pages.
I liked this book, it was an easy and quick read.
This is a great book, surprised no one has requested it yet!