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Everyone Worth Knowing by Lauren Weisberger
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Lauren Weisberger Edition: Hardcover Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2005-10-04 ISBN: 0743262298 Number of pages: 367 Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Book Reviews of Everyone Worth KnowingBook Review: "Everyone Worth Knowing" - Entirely Worth Reading! Summary: 5 Stars
Let me first off just set the record straight by saying I am not much of a reader. I make every attempt to read - It's just nothing keeps my interest longer than I can sit outside and get a tan. I was passing though the endless rows of books at Barnes and Noble and saw the cover of "Everyone Worth Knowing" on the shelf and was curious from the start. I read the back and next thing I knew I was at home laying on my hammock reading away. My friends and family were shocked to see me sitting on the couch and not moving for hours, just reading and reading. Hell! This book even interferred with my social life! I missed one of the biggest parties of the summer because I just had to read this book. And right now, it's 4:47am my time - Why am I still up? Because I just had to find out how this book would end!
I have never been so pleased with a book as far back as I can remember. "Everyone Worth Knowing" is an outstanding novel by Lauren Weisberger that really opens the "Black Door" into the world of PR. If you're anything like me, you probably think the world of the celebrity lifestyle is easy and flawless - the only reason is because of everyone behind them! Although this book is fiction, you feel as though you're playing the role of Bette's best friend, (even though that is Penelope in the book). You laugh, cry, even hop an emotional rollercoaster with Bette - and it's worth the ride!
Lauren Weisberger goes beyond the call of duty in this book - hell, you don't even feel like you're reading. I thought I was living the book like I said earlier. I would give his book the rating of inifinity if it was possible. I reccommend this to anyone and everyone. It can spark the interest of a hopeful NYC PR rep - to the quiet, shy girl in the corner - no matter who you are, you will fall in love with this novel! What are you waiting for? Go buy it!
Summary of Everyone Worth KnowingFrom the bestselling author of THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA comes a no-holds barred expose of the world of the Manhattan super-rich and super-successful. Bette is 27, smart, pretty, fun - and bored. When she splits up with her long-term boyfriend, she decides it's time for a change. A chance meeting propels her into a new role as a party planner. Running with the cool Manhattan pack, Bette can hardly believe her luck. Suddenly, the greatest city in the world is her own personal playground and boy, the toys are incredible! But quicker than you can say Manolo Blahnik, everything starts to fall apart. Bette finds herself the prey of a notorious playboy - and suddenly the lead item of the society gossip columns. Her new boss couldn't be more thrilled but Bette's family and old friends are less so. The girl they know and love, with a penchant for dodgy romance novels, cheesy 80s music and junk food, is in danger of turning into just another Park Avenue Princess. As Bette struggles to keep both her old and new lives from imploding, she finds salvation in an unlikely form. But can she say goodbye to the glamour and the Gucci, the Prada and the parties, and step back into the real world - and into the arms of a real Prince Charming? Lauren Weisberger, whose bestselling debut The Devil Wears Prada outed the vicious antics of the magazine industry elite, is back at it with Everyone Worth Knowing, another cautionary tale of sex, power, and fame. This time around, the PR industry is her target, and Prada fans will recognize similar themes throughout this entertaining, if at times overly dramatic, exposé. Bette Robinson is a twentysomething Emory graduate who shunned her parents' hippie ideals in favor of a high-paying yet excruciatingly boring job at a prestigious investment bank. One day, after a particularly condescending exchange with her boss (who sends her daily inspirational e-mails), Bette walks out on her job in a huff. After a few weeks of sleeping late, watching Dr. Phil and entertaining her dog Millington, Bette's uncle scores her a job at an up-and-coming public relations firm, where her entire job seems to revolve around staying out late partying and providing fodder for clandestine gossip columns. What follows is one episode after another of Bette climbing up the social ladder at the expense of her friends, family, and the one guy who actually seems worth pursuing. Weisberger is clever enough to turn seemingly outrageous circumstances into amusing anecdotes, like the tale of a woman who was close to suicide until she found out she was only 18 months away from scoring a highly coveted Birkin bag ("You simply cannot kill yourself when you're that close ... it's just not an option."). This wit, combined a hint of voyeurism that most of us can't deny, is what makes Everyone Worth Knowing a guilty pleasure that's well worth the indulgence. --Gisele Toueg The Significant Seven with Lauren Weisberger Lauren graciously agreed to answer the questions we like to ask every author.
 Q: What book has had the most significant impact on your life? A: Very tough question. For the first half of my life, it would definitely have to be Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret by Judy Blume. I worshipped that book. Recently, I'd say that it was Empire Falls by Richard Russo. Even though there's not a tremendous amount of action, the characters are brilliant. It's a hauntingly realistic depiction of small-town America. And the place descriptions are so compelling that the book is compulsively page-turning.
Q: You are stranded on a desert island with only one book, one CD, and one DVD--what are they? A: This is not the time for self-improvement, that's for sure--they'd all have to be 100% entertainment. For book it would have to be The Last of the California Girls, a random novel that I've read 2,000 times; for CD I would say Monster Ballads, the album of cheesy 80's love songs that I ordered from an 800-number, and for DVD, it would be Dirty Dancing, of course.
Q: What is the worst lie you've ever told? A: That one's easy. It goes something like this: "Hi, (insert editor's name here)! Yes, of course, it's already finished. I'm just tweaking a few sentences, and I'll have the whole draft to you by Monday, latest."
Q: Describe the perfect writing environment. A: For me, the best writing environments are all about deprivation and the removal of temptation. Therefore, anywhere on earth where there's no TV, no phone, no internet access, no friends, and no fridge is pretty much perfect.
Q: If you could write your own epitaph, what would it say? A: I really don't want to think about this one, but if I HAVE to, I hope it would include a few keywords like "brilliant," "supremely talented," and "drop-dead gorgeous."
Q: Who is the one person living or dead that you would like to have dinner with? A: I'm supposed to say Hemingway or Moses or Madonna, right? It'd probably just be my sister, Dana. We already have a lot of dinners together, so I know it's a guaranteed good laugh.
Q: If you could have one superpower, what would it be? A: The ability to be invisible! It would make all my current spying/stalking/staring SO much easier. Lauren Weisberger's List of Books You Should Read See more recommendations from Lauren Weisberger
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