Twenties Girl: A Novel

Twenties Girl: A Novel
by Sophie Kinsella

Twenties Girl: A Novel
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Book Summary Information

Author: Sophie Kinsella
Edition: Hardcover
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published)
Published: 2009-07-21
ISBN: 0385342020
Number of pages: 448
Publisher: The Dial Press

Book Reviews of Twenties Girl: A Novel

Book Review: TWENTIES GIRL Will Not Disappoint Becky Bloomwood Fans
Summary: 5 Stars

Lara Lington is a typical Sophie Kinsella heroine. A single Londoner, Lara is always reaching for that pie in the sky regardless of whether or not she likes the flavor. Her boyfriend, Josh, broke up with her two months ago, and since then she has been just a wee bit obsessed with A) finding out why he called things off with her, and B) getting back together. He is less than agreeable to these plans, however, and in addition to changing phone numbers to avoid her three texts a day, he has even managed to make her parents aware of her inability to let him go. She never stops to consider that maybe he just isn't her Mr. Right after all.

Lara has gone into business with her best friend Natalie, a successful headhunter who has opened her own agency. Unfortunately, on vacation in India, she falls in love with a Goan beach bum. Deciding not to return to London, L&N Executive Recruitment is left completely in the hands of Lara, who has absolutely no experience in the field having only jumped on this train because Natalie always made it sound like so much fun.

As the book begins, Lara is accompanying her parents (and sister Tonya, currently a stay-at-home mum who delights in pulling out topics of conversation that highlight Lara's shortcomings) to the funeral of her great aunt Sadie Lancaster, a woman she hasn't seen since she was in nappies and whom her parents had practically forgotten. It seems Aunt Sadie had lived in a nursing home since a debilitating stroke in her early 80s. She was 105 when she died and left behind no children, no heirs, and no family save for the few distant relatives who have gathered begrudgingly to pay their respects.

Joining Lara's family at the service is her father's brother, Uncle Bill, wife Trudy and their 17-year-old daughter, Diamante. Uncle Bill started Lington's Coffee (think Starbucks) some 20-odd years ago with "two little coins." In addition to a global coffee shop monopoly, he has created a successful side business of motivational speaking, career workshops and self-help books based on his premise that anyone can become anything with just 20 pence. His family is trailed by a documentary crew, and they make it plain that it is for this reason only that they are attending the funeral.

The service begins and Lara starts hearing voices. Or rather, a single beseeching voice that keeps asking repeatedly for a necklace. Lara looks around and finally sees a girl, not too far from her own age, but dressed in a style more appropriate for the flapper era, complete with pleats, beads and bob. This is Great Aunt Sadie. And yes, she is a ghost. Lara is the only person who can hear her (although if she gets really close to someone's ear and screams her head off, other people do seem to hear a little voice inside their head), and somehow Sadie manages to convince Lara that her funeral must be put off until they can find her necklace. Lara does this in true bobbling Kinsella form, first accusing the nursing home of murder, then a bearded stranger.

With a brief reprieve from the crematory chamber, Sadie becomes Lara's new shadow. It seems Sadie is able to appear wherever she wants just by thinking herself there, a trait that comes in handy as these two hapless detectives search for the beautiful necklace Sadie was given by her parents on her 21st birthday. It sounds divine --- rhinestones, strings of yellow beads and, dangling from it all, a dragonfly pendant. Sadie remembers this time of her life as the happiest --- she was in love with a local artist, and he with her, she was young and beautiful, and it was the height of the Jazz Age. As Lara spends more time with her, the rest of her life story comes out, and it soon becomes clear why she recalls those days with such fondness.

As they search, Sadie uses her parlor trick talents to convince Josh to give Lara another go. She also assists Lara in putting her business back on its feet, and when she finds a man she thinks is absolutely divine in a Rudolph Valentino kind of way, she gets Lara set up with Ed, a handsome visiting American, so that she herself can have "one last fling."

To say any more about what happens from here on out would completely spoil the smoothly laid surprise Kinsella has in store for the reader. Suffice it to say that I am very rarely taken unawares, but I did NOT see what was coming. It was not only delightfully unexpected, but also credible and most well conceived. Every single storyline follows out to wonderful conclusions, and more than a few people get their deserved comeuppance. And Lara? Well, let's just say she looks smashing in Vintage and finally figures out which pie in the sky is her favorite. TWENTIES GIRL will not disappoint Becky Bloomwood fans, is the perfect book for a lazy beach weekend, and just might end up being responsible for a run on vintage twenties clothes.

--- Reviewed by Jamie Layton

Summary of Twenties Girl: A Novel

Lara Lington has always had an overactive imagination, but suddenly that imagination seems to be in overdrive. Normal professional twenty-something young women don?t get visited by ghosts. Or do they?

When the spirit of Lara?s great-aunt Sadie?a feisty, demanding girl with firm ideas about fashion, love, and the right way to dance?mysteriously appears, she has one last request: Lara must find a missing necklace that had been in Sadie?s possession for more than seventy-five years, and Sadie cannot rest without it. Lara, on the other hand, has a number of ongoing distractions. Her best friend and business partner has run off to Goa, her start-up company is floundering, and she?s just been dumped by the ?perfect? man.

Sadie, however, could care less.

Lara and Sadie make a hilarious sparring duo, and at first it seems as though they have nothing in common. But as the mission to find Sadie?s necklace leads to intrigue and a new romance for Lara, these very different ?twenties? girls learn some surprising truths from each other along the way. Written with all the irrepressible charm and humor that have made Sophie Kinsella?s books beloved by millions, Twenties Girl is also a deeply moving testament to the transcendent bonds of friendship and family.
Amazon Exclusive: Sophie Kinsella on Twenties Girl

Sophie Kinsella is a former financial journalist and the author of the best-selling novels Confessions of a Shopaholic, Shopaholic Takes Manhattan, Shopaholic Ties the Knot, Shopaholic & Sister, Shopaholic & Baby, Can You Keep a Secret?, The Undomestic Goddess, and Remember Me?. She lives in England, where she is at work on her next book.

Writing Twenties Girl was like going on my own magical mystery tour. My U.S. editor Susan Kamil had once said casually, "You should write a ghost story one day." This comment stayed with me for years. I loved the idea, but didn't know who my ghost could be. I've always loved the glamour and spirit of the 1920s, and the idea came to me of a flapper ghost. A feisty, fun, glamorous girl who adored to dance and drink cocktails and get her own way. I wanted her to be a determined character who would blast into the life of someone with no warning and cause havoc. I then decided she should haunt a thoroughly modern girl, with all the culture clashes and comedy that would bring.

Having come up with this idea I loved it, so it then remained to plunge myself into 1920s research, which was no hardship at all, as I find the era fascinating. I researched vintage make-up, vintage dresses, read fiction from the period, investigated 1920s slang, and tried to channel as much I could of those feisty flappers who cut their hair short (shock!), smoked cigarettes in public (shock!), had sex (shock!) and generally rebelled in all the outrageous ways they could.

The book isn't a period piece though. It's a modern story about two girls and their sparky friendship, right here in the 21st century. One of them just happens to be a ghost from the 1920s. It's a quest, a romance, and a coming of age... and above all a comedy. It's no exaggeration to say that writing the character of Sadie made me look at life differently, and I hope some readers feel the same way. ?Sophie Kinsella

Sophie Kinsella on Jewelry in Twenties Girl

When I was at college I had a bicycle which I rarely used and which sat, week after week, in the bike racks. One day I went to get it out--and found a diamante necklace twined round the spokes of the front wheel. It was an old, vintage-style necklace, one of the prettiest things I?d ever seen. On my bike! How had it got there? Had someone borrowed my bike and dropped it? Was it a romantic gift from a secret admirer? (Ok, unlikely...)

I put up a notice in college--but got no claimers. It was mine! I wore that necklace over and over--and felt as though it had somehow magical qualities. Would it have felt so magical if it were a scarf or a hat or a purse? I don?t think so.

Jewelry has a magic all its own. Precious stones have always attracted legends, myths, crimes, lust. Quite sane women will go to pieces at the sight of a big enough diamond. Even as a tiny child I was fascinated by beads, jewels, tiaras...anything that glittered. And, like books, I find it hard to give pieces of jewelry away, even after I?ve stopped wearing them.

The biggest symbol of jewelry is love. Whose heart doesn?t stop on being presented with a little velvet box? Who secretly doesn?t crave a diamond, however teeny? Of course true love is putting out the rubbish every night...but that won?t make you gasp and tilt your hand to catch the facets of light.

When I was writing Twenties Girl I knew I needed to give Sadie, my ghost character, a mission. There was something in the world she still wanted--and it didn?t take long to decide on jewelry. A ring seemed too obvious...bracelets too inconsequential...but a necklace was perfect. I wanted it to be tactile, romantic, and the kind of piece you could imagine wearing with anything. Guided by research into jewelry of the 1920s, I conjured up in my head a long necklace of glimmering yellow glass beads, with a dragonfly pendant set with rhinestones. Not priceless....but special. I could imagine Sadie twirling the beads as she danced, I could imagine her gathering them and letting them drop. I could see it as an iconic, timeless piece.

A dragonfly seemed a perfect emblem for Sadie, too--beautiful, fragile, and darting around like quicksilver. The dragonfly symbol has different meanings for different cultures--for some it?s a symbol of change, for others it represents the subconscious. In Japanese paintings, dragonflies can mean new light and joy. To some Native Americans they?re the souls of the dead. All of these interpretations are perfect for the character of Sadie--a ghost who needs to "move on" and for whom the dragonfly necklace has a meaning all its own.

The more I wrote about Sadie?s dragonfly necklace the more it came to mean to both her and me--and I hope it does to readers, too.

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