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All's fair game
REVIEWS BY SANDY HUSEBY
We always suspected that the glamorous world of fashion and beauty magazines was witchy-bitchyfar more fascinating
behind the pages than on them. Author Lynn Messina reveals the flaws and foibles of editors who reign as tyrants in her
flamboyantly fun new novel, Fashionistas. For associate editor Vig
Morgan, life behind the scenes at Fashionista magazine is one long exercise in masochistic frustration. So when three
of her colleagues bring her a sure-fire plan to get rid of the editor-in-chief and all-around harridan, Jane McNeill,
Vig is only a tad reluctant to be the plan's linchpin. And thus the epic campaign begins, as Vig coerces a
semi-reluctant Alex Keller, the mysterious, tantrum-throwing events editor, to join the crusade. Messina
liberally seasons her sprightly, savvy novel with the challenges of surviving in Manhattan, while delivering
magnificently on the old truism of girl meets boy. Fashionistas is the ultimate urban fairy tale, in which
the good-enough girls win.
Fashionistas
By Lynn Messina
Red Dress Ink, $12.95
282 pages, ISBN 0373250258
My wild Irish
When an impoverished Irish maid resists the assault of her loutish English masterwhile her fiance's brother
Aidan fights with and kills the collector of the rentsthere can be only one outcome in Alexis Harrington's
poignant tale, The Irish Bride. Elopement and escape to America
seem the only alternative for Farrell Kirwan after her reckless resistance. But instead of her fiance, Liam, Farrell
marries his brother Aidan O'Rourke, and they set sail for New Orleans. Family complications heighten Farrell's
travails. Not only is she married to the wrong brother, but Aidan O'Rourke's victim was her own brother Michael.
Blinding herself to her brother's faults and refusing to see the best of Aidan, Farrell vows to keep her love for
Liam alive. Englishman Noel Cardwell, pressured by his father to redeem himself, is determined to pursue the pair
and bring them to justice. One to bed, the other, dead, thinks he. Alexis Harrington evokes the wistful troubles
of the Irish in this splendid tale.
The Irish Bride
By Alexis Harrington
St Martin's Press, $6.50
352 pages, ISBN 0312979568
Brotherly love
Forensic anthropologist T.J. McCloud has more than enough headaches to deal with, including investigating the
source of long-buried bones the town fathers hope are those of pirates and fearing a trusted friend has covered
up Balkan war crimes. In Patricia Rice's evocative contemporary novel, McCloud's Woman, McCloud has followed his brother Jared's path to a tiny Carolina beach
community in search of privacy to research the bones and find out if the crimes were covered up. The last thing
he needs is Patsy Simonetti, the feisty nemesis of his youth, to reappear in his life. She's not the Patsy he
remembers. Now calling herself Mara Simon, she's bleached, bobbed, multi-married and determined to prove herself
in the volatile world of movie producing. As they tussle over which one should control the use of a tiny plot of
land, forces determined to keep the secret of crimes of another war threaten the fragile truce that grows between
them. Vigorous storytelling combines with intriguing characters in this fast-paced and fascinating read.
McCloud's Woman
By Patricia Rice
Ivy, $6.99
352 pages, ISBN 0804119821
Here's lookin' at you, kids
Selling pricey Beverly Hills real estate isn't enough to support the Abruzzi family's California vineyard in
Sandra Hill's charming time-travel romp, The Very Virile Viking.
The answer to Angela Abruzzi's dreams may lie in permitting the vineyard to be used as a movie set. And then her
real salvation comes along. Never mind that Magnus Ericsson comes two millennia into the future to provide that
solution, or that he comes equipped with nine childrennine!as if in answer to Grandma Rose Abruzzi's
prayers. Hill delivers a warm-hearted tale of falling in love that's as sparkling and zesty as the wines of
Blue Dragon vineyard.
The Very Virile Viking
By Sandra Hill
Leisure, $6.99
384 pages, ISBN 0843950641
Sandy Huseby writes and reviews from her homes in Fargo, North Dakota, and lakeside in northern Minnesota.
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