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Anonymous
Posted August 7, 2007
I thought that Leslie Corroll did an amazing job with this book! She developed her characters so good that I felt like I knew them and I was right there with Kitty on all of her bad dates! I found myself laughing out loud while riding this book and unable to put the book down! While the last page lacked a little bit and left you saying '...wait!! I want to hear more!!' the book was definitely a delight to read! This book is funny, sexy, heart breaking, hopeful and a real joy to read!!
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Posted April 21, 2003
Sigh! Sex and the City has a lot to answer for. Miss-Match by Leslie Carroll is appropriately titled because it is a miss-match between romance and chick-lit. While Ms. Carroll clearly has talent as a writer, if she continues to write books like this she'll be doing the world a complete disservice. This book doesn't ring true on any level. The hero not only publishes a financial newsletter, composes Broadway caliber music but is also a massage therapist? I'm sure in what little spare time he has he's also working on a cure for cancer. We're supposed to believe that an bartender/musician working under the table would spend $500 to join a dating service to find a green card wife, when personals in the Village Voice are free? What self-respecting New York woman would give strange men her home address just because they've signed up with a dating service? For someone who claims to be looking for true romance, the heroine of this book spends most of her time getting drunk on first dates and thinking about casual sex. The author, although a native New Yorker, clearly knows nothing about living in a co-op. There are too many coincidences (Bear has no place to go but Kathryn's apartment when his mother's is flooded? How many hotels are there in NY, he has a house in CT and he clearly has friends). The dialogue is arch, and completely unrealistic. The characters seem to feel they are in a Noel Coward play instead of living, breathing people. Save your hard-earned dosh and give a miss to Miss-Match.
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Posted November 11, 2002
This book was absolutely hilarious! Once I got started I couldn't put it down. One mishap after another, could anyone really have this kind of luck.
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Posted October 3, 2002
The author constantly lapses into quotes from musicals to make you believe the characters are witty. I laughed the first time. By the second Oklahoma (I think) reference, I'd had enough. I love screwball romantic comedy as much as the next gal, if it's Hepburn and Grant or Carroll Lombard and anyone. But this is more like a Doris day/Rock Hudson fix up. Silly and predictable. Plus, I have a hard time caring whether or not a near-alcoholic woman who'd sleep with anyone finds her true love. It kind of makes you doubt they'd actually end up together for the long term. I agree with Shakespeare and David O. Selznick: all romantic comedies must end with a wedding (or similar). I guess there are really women like her out there, but I don't want to read about them. Except for Bridget Jones.
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Posted October 9, 2002
I thoroughly enjoyed Ms. Carroll's analysis of being single in New York. The date scenes were wonderfully described and frighteningly accurate! This book is DELICIOUS! I've recommended it to all my friends and they have enjoyed it as well. Please do yourself a favor: if you want a fun read, go and get this book!
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Posted April 10, 2002
A truly delightful read. The characters were wonderfully written and the situations were hilarious. I recommend this to anyone. A high school drama teacher joins a video dating service after dumping her narcissistic fiance who loved himself more than he loved her. She has a series of wonderfully written disasterous dates with well defined characters. The dating service is being run by the owners bachelor son while mom is off getting married yet again.... is it a wonder he is commitment phobic?? Try this one and enjoy.
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Posted April 3, 2002
A delicious, hilarious and honest rendition of the pitfalls and delights of looking for love in NYC. Finally -- a book that let me indulge in romantic fantasy and still respect myself in the morning.
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Posted January 28, 2002
I had the privilege of reading this book to quote and thoroughly enjoyed it. Anyone who loves chic/Brit lit as I do, can't help but be taken in by Ms. Carroll's engaging characters and witty dialogue. Ms. Carroll obviously knows her setting of NYC well, and does a great job of bringing it to life. I highly recommend this book to anyone looking for a great, fun read.
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Posted January 21, 2002
In New York, to shut up her nosy neighbor ¿Yenta¿, Kathryn ¿Kitty¿ Lamb agrees to try the woman¿s matchmaking service. At Six in the City, Kitty meets Walker ¿Bear¿ Hart, a successful financial guru, who is filling in for his mother Yenta as she travels in Wales on her latest honeymoon. Bear and Kitty are immediately attracted to one another especially their shared warped sense of humor, but she wants love and marriage while he avoids commitment. <P>Kitty begins dating the men that Bear provides to her, but none seem to compare with her host. He, in turn, is jealous of each date he arranges for Kitty. However, though he wants her, Bear knows that relationships are fleeting as he learned observing his mother. Kitty knows who her true match is, but expects to miss out on the love of a lifetime because he cannot escape the lessons of a lifetime. <P> MISS MATCH is an engaging amusing contemporary romance that contains a serious undertone on what parents leave with their children including those grown up. The story line is fun due to the lead couple¿s reactions to one another and the antics of the five dates. Though done many times before, readers will enjoy Kitty¿s trip through the looking glass of singles dating in Manhattan because Leslie Carroll uses the eccentric cast to provide freshness to the scene. The ensemble thoroughly entertains the audience. <P>Harriet Klausner
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Posted January 28, 2002
'Miss Match' is a delightful, funny chronicle about the travails of a young single woman in New York, trying to cope with the world of commitment-avoiding men. Turning to a state-of-the-art dating service that utilizes computers and video interviews, the central character, Kathryn 'Kitty' Lamb, experiences more laughable and engaging adventures than Cunegonda in 'Candide.' Clearly written by a sophisticated and witty New Yorker who knows the city well, 'Miss Match' takes you for a roller coaster ride of romantic adventures from the funky East Village to the Upper West Side of Manhattan. The characters are bigger than life, yet the core of Kitty's adventures (and misadventures) as she seeks the perfect mate to marry, are founded on credible reality. It was a fun read.
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Posted February 18, 2002
'Miss Match' is a delightful, funny page-turner about the comedy of errors known as the New York dating scene. Drama teacher Kathryn 'Kitty' Lamb takes the plunge into this often daunting arena when she signs up with a video dating service called 'Six and the City' She gamely goes on a series of dates - or misadventures. But she can't help thinking that the charming, sexy owner/manager of the dating service would be the ideal man...if only he weren't commitment-phobic. Clearly written by a true New Yorker who knows the territory, 'Miss Match' presents the reader with a large, complex, and vastly entertaining cast of characters, literate and witty dialogue, and an engaging heroine. Many thanks to Leslie Carroll for bringing this New York story to life!
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Posted January 4, 2002
Leslie Carroll's Miss Match is charming and witty; the perfect book to take on an airplane or cruise ship -to the beach or resort or to curl up with by the fire on a cold night. Her often eccentric and always complex characters are drawn so clearly you really see them in your mind and feel you know them as they come alive on the pages. The leading lady, Kathryn (Kitty) Lamb, a high school drama teacher, has been touted onto Six and the City ( a dating service) by a flamboyant, nosey neighbor. She takes the bait...fishing for marriage material. Instead, she meets five guys who provide unpredictable situations...none of which spells c-o-m-m-i-t-m-e-n-t; and the service's interim manager, Walker 'Bear' Hart who sets the dates...but won't consider setting the date. Six and the City's videos lead Kitty to a prospective bigamist, to jail, to a necrophiliac, to Hades, and to a double cross. Each episode a delicious scenario all by itself. During this truly romantic New York journey, we meet Kathryn's upper east side MBA sister; Johanna, her two year old niece and 'Bear' Hart's oft-married mother. All of whom contribute deliciously to the ever evolving plot. The comedic repartee is a delight to read. It reminded me of those marvelous screwball romantic movie comedies of the 1930s and `40s. At $6.99 it's the 'feel good' bargain of the year!
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Posted March 18, 2012
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Posted June 6, 2012
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Posted August 27, 2010
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Posted November 4, 2010
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