Between the Covers...
a book club that intertwines both Second Life and real life
“Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living, it’s a way of looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope.” Dr Suess
Hi there. This column intends to share book reviews (both from RL and SL) that ignite our cumulative imaginations and to interview writers in Second Life.
We invite you to make yourself a coffee or pour yourself a glass of your favourite wine and engage with us as you would in a real-life book club. Let's talk about your favourite authors and their latest releases, or let's chat about the classics and what they mean to you. How about comparing books to their TV shows, movies or games?
I'm kicking off the column with a review of a book called HOW TO BE FAMOUS by Caitlin Moran. It's absolutely fabulous and resonated with me and my Second Life attempts at being a journalist albeit only virtually.
The review was written by Matthew Jackson and published in - https://bookpage.com/
HOW TO BE FAMOUS
ISBN 9780062433770
Published 07/03/2018
HOW TO BE FAMOUS
A rollicking launch into adulthood
BookPage review by Matthew Jackson
Caitlin Moran has a gift—in both short- and long-form writing, in both fiction and nonfiction—that hits like magic when it lands in the lap of the right reader. It’s a rare, mesmerizing talent to simultaneously move a reader and make them laugh so hard they risk falling out of their chair. In How to Be Famous, Moran’s follow-up to How to Build a Girl, she works that magic again.
Moran reunites readers with Johanna Morrigan, a teenager from the Midlands of England who moves to London to further her music journalism career as Dolly Wilde. Once there, she is swept up in a world of rock stars, comedians, parties and in particular John Kite, a newly famous musician with whom she is madly in love. Though they’re close, her love is not returned at first, and through a series of adventures, Dolly becomes convinced that the way to draw John closer to her is to write her own way to stardom and seduce him with the power of her prose. Once she’s resigned to do this, things start to happen quickly for Dolly, and she must learn to deal with fame and infamy while also reaching out for the only person she’s really trying to touch.
How to Be Famous lives or dies based on Moran’s ability to render Dolly as an enchanting, vulnerable and hilarious guide through the mid-1990s London music scene, and Dolly’s charm immediately jumps off the page. Dolly is at once bitingly witty and achingly open, not just to the reader but also to the world she’s trying to find her place in, and it sets a tone that makes you both root for her and anticipate her next misadventure.
That might be enough to carry the novel on its own, but Moran doesn’t stop there. Her ambition, like Dolly’s, is to weave into this tale a kind of feminist manifesto that tackles love and sex, as well as the fine line between girlhood and womanhood. She succeeds throughout but keeps you waiting for the final, unforgettable exclamation point at the book’s hysterical climax.
This article was originally published in the August 2018 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.