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Angels
by Marian Keyes, Niamh Cusack | Humor
Registered by MaiSpritt of Roanoke, Virginia USA on Saturday, September 13, 2003
Average 8 star rating by BookCrossing Members 

status (set by MaiSpritt): permanent collection


1 journaler for this copy...

Journal Entry 1 by MaiSpritt from Roanoke, Virginia USA on Saturday, September 13, 2003

8 out of 10

Found this one to be a great book - am really a big fan of Marian Keyes, who seems to be able to "surprise" me again and again :o)

So this is actually one of the books that I think that I will keep :oD

  • Click here for a list of the other "Angels" books registrered here at BookCrossing.com - a pretty short list, since I am currently the only one having registered this book!! :oO
  • And.. Click here for comments on this book from Amazon.co.uk users

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As an appetizer, the review from Amazon.co.uk, which goes like this:
A new Marian Keyes novel is always something to celebrate, and her sixth novel, Angels, will have you cheering. From the first couple of sentences: "I'd always lived a fairly blameless life. Up until the day I left my husband and ran away to Hollywood, I'd hardly ever put a foot wrong" to the hugely satisfying last page, you're immediately involved in the story of Maggie Walsh's life; of how it went wrong, and then went right again.

The Walshes starred in a previous Keyes novel, the delightful Rachel's Holiday; Maggie is Rachel's older sister, (one of five) and the only one who "never did any of that nasty sleeping around business". Instead she got married to her first boyfriend Paul Garvan and everything was fine, until they suffered a couple of "setbacks". Unable to face sorting out the difficulties, Maggie hightails it to Los Angeles to stay with her old pal Emily. Emily is a script writer, her short film A Perfect Day was a big hit in Ireland, but her working life is a little tougher in the land of sunshine and fat-free Pringles. The two girls, along with a supporting cast of wannabes, scary film studio folk and slacker next door neighbours, get on with sorting out their emotional issues in a stylishly witty, wonderfully warm fashion. Maggie's devilish ex-boyfriend and the commitment phobic Troy add in a delightful frisson of sexual tension.

Marian Keyes observations on the foibles of love and LA are laugh-out-loud funny, but there's a beguiling tenderness there too. By the time you reach the final full stop you'll be sighing with contentment, and just wishing that Marian would get a move on with the next book.

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