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Nannies
The River Killings (Unabridged)
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Merry Jones
List price: $32.95
New price: $17.30

Average review score:

Rowing OK, story is weak
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-18
If a summer beach read in which it doesn't matter that normal belief is suspended and a plucky, confused heroine is an attraction, then this book is for you.

As a rower and sculler, I confess to have read this book because of the sport reference and having rowed on the Schuylkill. After 15-years of rowing and rowing in college, I have yet to encounter a rowing coach as abusive as the one portrayed in the book or boathouse employees engaged in anything as horrific as the prostitution/slavery central to the story. Furthermore, the description of the beginning of a rowing race in which one of the two rowers in a boat freezes rather than races is just a plot gimmick that does nothing to enhance the story. Pulling a fragile boat up on a beach like a canoe is not likely either.

The heroine is plagued with doubts throughout the story all the while constantly leaving her 6-year old daughter in dangerous situations during a time murdered bodies are being strewn about. Additionally the heroine employs double standards as she bemoans the fact that her policeman boyfriend doesn't disclose details of the case in which she has stumbled. But she feels ok violating his privacy and reading his email despite telling him not to use her computer although she knows he didn't read her mail, to "get the truth". I didn't find her character to be believable or sympathetic.

The book is long on nagging thoughts and short on action. One thing is certain, every thought she has serves to fill the pages.

thrilling read!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-14
Zoë Hayes, an art therapist in Philadelphia, has returned in The River Killings, sequel to The Nanny Murders. Zoë and her best friend Susan have taken up sculling on the Schuylkill River and have gone for a quiet, late night practice when their boat tips them into a group of dead bodies - floaters. This is the beginning of another emotional roller coaster for Zoë as she ends up amidst a human trafficking investigation headed up by her boyfriend Detective Nick Stiles in cooperation with the FBI.

After Zoë and Susan report the floaters in the Schuylkill River to the police, they find that they are unwillingly drawn into the world of human trafficking. Once the newspapers published their names in connection with the bodies in the river, they are approached by many strangers asking for whatever information they have from their dip in the river. Not knowing whom to trust, they deny all knowledge, but this doesn't seem to convince anyone. Susan is the victim of a car-jacking while Zoë is zealously cleaning her house after a break-in. Zoë still has trust issues with Nick, and his new case isn't helping matters when Zoë feels that she, having found the bodies, should be privy to information on the case.

When Nick accidentally leaves his email account open, Zoë abuses her ideals by investigating the contents without his consent. By doing so, she finds out there is more going on in her personal life than just an accidental dip in the river. Nick's past is coming back to haunt them, bringing Zoë and her daughter Mollie into a turbulent maelstrom of peril.

Susan and Zoë persist in their sculling training for a local competition and they find that there are a lot of undercurrents in their new hobby that have nothing to do with water. Who, in their acquaintance, could possibly be committing such a heinous act against fellow humans? After a big argument, Nick storms off to calm down, until Zoë follows her intuition that Nick is in danger. She sets out to find him, once again endangering herself but realizing that she must trust herself before she can trust anyone else.

This is an impressive mystery, following the troubles of a single mother who is trying to do her best to get by in a violent world. We are able to share in her ups and downs and her daily activities and interactions with her friends and see how Zoë manages to wind up in the middle of murder and violence without fault of her own. There is a bit of naïveté to her personality that is not always credible, and at times she doesn't seem to learn from her mistakes. But her panic and fear do give some of her behaviors credibility.

Cozy readers would be uncomfortable with the violence and high body count, but the mystery is intriguing, the characters personable, and the rapid pace disconcerting. [...]

Suspenseful Thriller Combines Murder, Slave Trafficking, and Rowing
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-12
Set against the backdrop of the Humberton Barge, a fictional rowing club located on Philadelphia's famed Boathouse Row, "The River Killings" offers the reader a suspense-filled tale of murder combined with the sport of rowing. Best friends Zoe Hayes and Susan Cummings are practicing with determination to enter the summer's first rowing race, the Navy Regatta. While rowing on the Schuykill during a late night practice, the two women accidentally flip their boat, only to discover a floating armada of nineteen corpses, who turn out to all be Asian women. after this nightmarish boating mishap, the two heroines endure a carjacking, a break-in at Zoe's home, and a strange woman apparantly following Zoe's six-year old daughter Molly. The police quickly determine that the nineteen dead women were Asian "slaves", and Zoe and Susan wonder if the carjacking and break-in are related to their grisly discovery. Zoe and Susan are visited by other mysterious characters who claim to be investigating the deaths of the Asian women as the suspense builds in this novel. The story line of the mysterious deaths of the women kept me turning the pages.

The reason that I gave this novel only four stars, though, was the fact that I found it difficult to empathize with the main character of Zoe Hayes. I could not believe the number of times Zoe's character left her six-year old daughter alone in the middle of the night to deal with various crises in the story. Also, I felt that Zoe spent an unreasonable amouont of time in the story feeling sorry for herself.

I did enjoy the rowing aspect of the story immensely. Author Jones did a good job of presenting enough information about the sport of rowing to give the reader an appreciation for it without drowning the reader in too many details.

"The River Killings" was an enjoyable, suspenseful read set against an interesting background.

Nannies
Circle of Fire: Murder and Betrayal in the "Swiss Nanny" Case (Circle of Fire)
Published in Hardcover by William Morrow & Co (1994-12)
Author: Joyce Egginton
List price: $22.00
New price: $9.99
Used price: $0.01
Collectible price: $22.00

Average review score:

Reasonable Doubt
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-07-15
It was an okay book, but there were some things that I didn't agree with. I don't think homesickness was much of a murder motive. Stealing babyclothes is a lot different than murder. Being a shy virgin doesn't make you screwed up (I am also a virgin), and having an eating disorder doesn't make you violent. Maybe the reason Olivia didn't rescue Kristie was that Olivia was terrified of fire. Arson investigators have made some serious mistakes. I once heard of a case where a mother was accused of starting a fire that killed her 8-month-old son. The investigators thought that the fire started in the closet in the baby's room. There shouldn't have been anything flammable in there. It later turned out that the fire started in the attic, because something was wrong with the heating system. That is a big difference. The investigators trying to solve Kristie's murder could have been wrong, too. Someone could have been in the house with Kristie and Olivia. Maybe Olivia didn't want to admit that she wasn't paying enough attention. John Gallagher told a lot of lies. Another thing, you can't tell whether or not someone is a murderer by their handwriting. This doesn't mean that I am sure she is innocent, I just have reasonable doubt, like the jury.

An Excellent Book, Very interesting!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-18
This book was very interesting and grabbed my attention.

I live in Valhalla, NY (about 1 mile from Thornwood, NY). I know Louis Alagno, and Greg Wind (police lieutenant and fire chief in the book). Louis Alagno is now my Boy Scout leader, and Chief of Police for Mount Pleasant, NY (Thornwood, Valhalla, and Hawthorne).

After reading this book, I talked to them. They recall the incident clearly, and say that this book is not exaggurated at all.

A disgustingly one-sided account
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-02
I read this book and believe me I was disgusted at Joyce Egginton's arrogance in claiming that only Olivia Riner murdered the child and used some obscure dissertation from the 19th century to "prove" her so-called guilt. She also lambasts the defense attorney for the way she used the media. If the prosecution was upset at the way the defense used the media then why didn't they get the judge to issue a media blackout on the attorneys? What really disgusted me about Ms. Egginton was the way she declared that Ms. Riner was mentally unstable. Instead of a psychiatrist she used a hand-writing expert! I was also disgusted at the way the Fischer family handled having Ms. Riner in their home. Ms. Riner came over here not just to take care of the child but also for a cultural exchange and to learn about the United States. I only recommend this book if you want the Fischer's side of the story. Otherwise read "The Nanny Murder Trial" by Don Davis for a more balanced view of this story.

This book is well-written and builds a persuasive case.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-24
I think that Ms. Egginton's book is far superior to Don Davis's book, "The Nanny Murder Trial." Ms. Egginton includes information about Olivia Riner which Mr. Davis either did not know or simply neglected to include in his book. Until I read this book, I did not know that Olivia had stolen a whole bag full of baby clothes from the Fischer family. (How do Olivia's supporters explain that?) The passage from Olivia's diary in which she wished that her previous employer, the German doctor, would die was also bizarre. Ms. Egginton builds a persuasive case against Olivia Riner. She explains why Olivia's alibi is not believable, and she rebuts the false charges that Olivia's defense team raised against John Gallagher and Leah Fischer. Ms. Egginton identifies the Fischer family member who made the infamous "barbecue" remark which was erroneously attributed to John Gallagher. Ms. Egginton explains that the remark was actually made by one of Kristie Fischer's paternal uncles, and Ms. Egginton makes it clear that the uncle was only joking and was not malicious. One of the most fascinating parts of this book was the final chapter. I thought that the similarities between Olivia's situation and the cases of the murderous eighteenth- and nineteenth-century nursemaids were both amazing and disturbing. By the time I finished this book, I was one hundred percent certain that Olivia Riner was guilty. I was also deeply moved by Ms. Egginton's account of the extended Fischer family's history and the other tragedies that they had already endured. My only complaint is that Ms. Egginton occasionally criticizes Olivia for alleged shortcomings which have nothing to do with the crime. What does it matter that Olivia didn't wear makeup when she went out to eat? I also do not agree with Ms. Egginton that Olivia's long hair "should have been either braided or cut short." I am a long-haired woman, and I resented Ms. Egginton's irrelevant beauty tips. Another portion of Ms. Egginton's book that annoyed me was a set of quotes by Linda Sawyer, an early defender of Olivia who eventually turned on her. According to Ms. Sawyer, Olivia was "screwed up about sex" because she was proud of being a virgin. Virgins are NOT "screwed up about sex," and virginity is NOT evil! I am a virgin, and I resented the connection that Ms. Egginton drew between virginity and criminality. I would have given this book five stars if Ms. Egginton had omitted the snide remarks about Olivia's hair, her failure to wear makeup, and her lack of sexual experience.

Nannies
Global Woman : Nannies, Maids, and Sex Workers in the New Economy
Published in Paperback by (2004-01-01)
Authors: Arlie Russell Hochschild and Barbara Ehrenreich
List price: $15.00
New price: $6.97
Used price: $6.74

Average review score:

nannies and sex workers in same title is offensive
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 173 total.
Review Date: 2003-03-05
As the mother of five that relied on childcare during the many years of single parenting I think we tend to concentrate too much on the elite and their need for childcare. The notion that this childcare contributes to the foreign exchange is a little off base when in reality it contributes to an underground economy because the salaries are mostly off the books and taxes are not paid in any form. Safety issues also arise when you consider that most of the illegeal aliens caring for our children have never had childhood immunizations, and refuse the TB test. This may sound unimportant and nit picking but the reality is diseases we thought were erradicated like whooping cough can be traced to the unimmunized worker. Leaving your children behind to take care of mine is something we as a nation should give more thought about.

Good Overview of Female Migrant Workers
Helpful Votes: 34 out of 35 total.
Review Date: 2003-04-11
...Nevertheless, this book gives the reader valuable insight into the impact and opinions of women migrant workers in the service trades. All of the anthologized authors write in an accessible style free of academic jargon. I was particularly interested in the articles which did not have an American viewpoint and which presented the views of the women (and occasionally men) involved. For example, in various essays we get to meet Dominican women in the sex trade hoping to form relationships with European men; a college-educated Vietnamese women entering into an arranged marriage with an immigrant man holding an unskilled job in the U.S.; Filipina household workers laughing about the rules proposed by prospective Hong Kong employers; and a Sri Lankan man taking over the traditional woman's role to assist migrant relatives working in Saudi Arabia.

There are some gaps here, such as the lack of first-person narratives and the views of Eastern European women working in Western Europe, but no anthology can be all-inclusive. This book is a good start and will be an intersting learning experience for most readers.

Thought provoking but a passive observer with no recommendations
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-01
Global Woman: Nannies, Maids, and Sex Workers in the New Economy, edited by Barbara Ehrenreich and Arlie Russell Hochschild, Metropolitan Books, Holt & Co, 2002.

Most of us are well aware of the patterns of illegal immigration which bring numerous undocumented workers to the US and other developed countries from less developed countries. Those who work in agriculture, lawn care, and low paying jobs like janitors are well known. This book takes a detailed look at female migrant workers. These include maids, nannies, nurses, those who care for the young and elderly and extends to those kidnaped or sold into the sex slave trade and those who seek marriageable partners in developed countries to obtain visas. A single mother can earn enough in a developed country as a nurse, a nanny or as a prostitute to leave her children behind in the care of a relative and pay for their education and daycare. This process gives her children access to a better education that can lift them out of poverty.

This book is a collection of essays authored with assistance of researchers from numerous third world countries. The sociological aspect is consistent with Ehrenreich's usual works--always rich with social commentary. This time she functions as editor and provides one chapter from her earlier experience at Merry Maids as told in Nickeled and Dimed. Hochschild is professor of sociology at Berkeley.

The major migratory pathways for women are described generally as from south to north. In the US, African American women accounted for 60% of domestics in the 1940s. They have now been replaced by Latinas mostly from Mexico and Central America. In Europe migrants come from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. In the oil rich Mideast, many come from Bangladesh, Indonesia, the Phillippines, and Sri Lanka. In France, they now come from Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria; in Italy, from Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Cape Verde. Generally, migrants have replaced those who once came from poor rural areas of their own countries.

Several chapters on nannies and their problems are especially informative. The hours are long, overtime is seldom paid, time off it minimal, workers are sometimes farmed out to other families, or required to travel with the family on "holiday." The children often become attached to the nanny as part of the family, but this can result in jealousy on the part of birth mothers. Many nannies leave abruptly after an argument.

Various aspects of the sex trade are explored. In the Dominican Republic, married women may voluntarily go to the larger town of Sosua to work as prostitutes in the sex tourist industry. This good money is used to pay the family bills, but husbands sometimes spend the funds on alcoholism and gambling when the wife is away. Some prostitutes hope for a marriage proposal from German tourists. In Thailand, in the less prosperous mountain districts, daughters once were sold into sex slavery when the economic survival of the family required it. Now, rapid industrialization and rising standard of living have created major growth in sex tourism. Industrial workers have more money to spend on prostitutes. Mountain Thais now are more willing to sell their daughters to fund the purchase of electronics and other consumer goods.

In Viet Nam, the war killed many males and a disproportionate number of males were able to migrate to the US after the war. This has resulted in an over abundance of females. Educated females become un-marriageable. Arranged marriages with US citizens is one solution to this problem.

This book provides perspective on another aspect of the woman's rights movement in developing countries. Apparently several previous books have issued, but this subject has received little attention in the overall scheme of immigration policy. I saw no discussion of how these problems should be addressed. Presumably better laws are needed as well as a willingness to enforce existing laws in the case of the sex slavery and sex tourism. Different solutions seem appropriate in the case of licensed nurses who are aided in getting visas to fill a real shortage. The presence of undocumented migrants working as nannies and domestics is yet another problem. Perhaps different solutions are needed for each group. Mixing all of them in a single volume confuses the issues. The book lacks the impact it could have had.

This book is nicely done and thought provoking, but the absence of proposed solutions is a major omission. A collection of charts provide details of the female migrations. Notes. Bibliography. Index.



Fact-filled, careful study
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2004-05-09
In brief essays, the authors present generally unbiased academic discussions of the globalization of female workers. Though hardly a new phenomenon, it has dramatically increased in the last 50 years and is a topic that is deserving of this type of examination. The topics are clearly delineated between domestic workers, cheap labor and the sex trade - however, there are unfortunates whose experiences range from one to the other out of necessity, desperation or coercion. This harsh reality of the vulnerability of these women is discussed with jargon-free, scholarly precision. Excellent for libraries, research and the well-read individual.

Nannies
Oh No! We Need a Nanny! : The In-Home Childcare Dilemma
Published in Paperback by AuthorHouse (2000-08-21)
Author: Carol Greco
List price: $15.95
New price: $9.97
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Average review score:

Needs an editor
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-06
I was very disappointed with this book. Besides being totally distracted by the misspelled words and badly placed punctuation, I did not feel this was a "comprehensive" guide to finding a nanny. The author spends too much time recalling her own woes in finding and keeping good childcare, and not enough detailing the process for others. This author needs a good editor to re-write this book - there are some helpful nuggets of information buried in this poorly written and seemingly un-edited resource.

Hi Mom! Great book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-05
Hi, I'm Lisa, Ms. Grecos daughter. I designed the cover.(hope you like it!) Anyway, I think the book is good, it has hard facts and great tips to help you in getting the right nanny.

Joyce's Review
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-27
I have read other books on how to find childcare help. This book totally covered every aspect of this process for me. The author discusses things in her book that I never would have even thought of, some of which are so crucial in my search for the best childcare for my children. Before reading this extremely informative book, I thought I would ask some basic questions of my perspective nanny. After reading this book, I realized that all I had to do was open this book and follow what the author said. Ms. Greco has completely covered every detail for me.

Nannies
Rancher And The Nanny (Desire, 1298)
Published in Paperback by Silhouette (2000-06-01)
Author: Cross
List price: $3.99
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Average review score:

MOST INTERESTING!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-17
John MacLaren and Eve Chandler had a bit of a past history --
What did he know about creating a home for a delicate child like Lissy?

Eve was selling her grandfather's ranch - she needed the money -- yet she was dressed fit to kill. MacLaren could not believe that she needed a job. As a housekeeper and nanny?? It didn't make sense.

But Eve found a way to help Lissy blossom and to melt John's icy reserve. Did she become John's warm, willing lover and what would happen if she recovered her lost riches??

Would Lissy and John become the losers all the way around?

Enjoyable
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-05
A rich girl becomes poor and ends up working for someone that once worked for her family. The relationship between the two, could have stayed tense. Instead, Ms. Cross works on the growth of both characters. I also loved the little girl. That's not commonplace for me, in books. I look for Caroline Cross' name when buying books.

Caroline Cross does it again
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-31
This is the story of Eve Chandler and John MacLaren. Eve was from a rich and prominent family, but is now homeless because her grandfather made some poor business decisions and she had to sell the family ranch to pay off debts. John has recently learned that he has a daughter, but has no experience raising a young girl and eventually decides that he needs a nanny/housekeeper/cook. Eve begins to work for John and she begins to draw Lissy, John's daughter, out of her shell. Eve and John become attracted to each other, but John is convinced that he doesn't know about love and caring for someone since he was raised in an orphanage. Eve's efforts to prove otherwise prove futile.

The ending was a bit quick so I gave it 4 stars instead of 5, but a pleasant book to read. Caroline Cross never disappoints.

Nannies
Nanny Diaries
Published in Paperback by St. Martin's Press (2003)
Author:
List price:
New price: $10.00
Used price: $4.40

Average review score:

Nanny Nonsense
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-24
A note is left for you to organize the gift bags for your boss's dinner party, but no details are left. She doesn't answer her cell and no one seems to know what color, style etc... Do you call her husband (who you have not met in the two months that you have been taking care of his child) and attempt to get and answer, or take the risk of messing up and being fired? In the realistic fiction book The Nanny Diaries by Emma Mclaughlin and Nicola Kraus, Nanny is a NYU student paying her rent by taking care of children who belong to snobby, neglecting Upper East Side families
A major idea is a comparison of a close family vs. a family that is hardly connected at all because the father works non-stop and the mother pulls and act of pretending to know everything about her son yet doesn't spend anytime with him and lets the innocent nannies have all the responsibly.
Readers who enjoy reading books so as The Devil Wears Prada and the Gossip Girl Series should enjoy the crazy nonsense that goes on in The Nanny Diaries.

DOES NOT MERIT THE HYPE IT RECEIVED...
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-06
I had originally thought that this was going to be a work of non-fiction in a nanny tell all. It turned out, instead, to be a mildly funny look at the rich and obnoxious and their young children through the eyes of a spineless nanny. While some of this book is amusing, it is not particularly well written. It is the kind of book you read once, and then promptly forget. It is not a bad book, as it is somewhat entertaining. What this book really represents is what happens when a book grabs the attention of the media. It becomes a best seller. Long after the dust settles, I anticipate that this book will be to the publishing world, what a one hit wonder is to the music industry.

This work of fiction provides caricatures of selfish, self-absorbed, wealthy parents and a peek into the life of their overly-structured and overly-managed offspring. The nanny in question is also a caricature, as she struggles to be appear good hearted, but in the end is just a spineless jellyfish who goes along with the program, no matter how offensive she may find her employers and their demands to be. The nanny tries to come across as an underprivileged, put upon employee, but is, in reality, part of the problem, as she is certainly not a part of the solution. She is an upper middle class young woman who attends a prestigious university. She is hardly one of the hoi polloi, no matter how much she may empathize with those who are truly at the mercy of employers such as the ones found in this book. As social satire this book falls short. Borrow it from the library. Do not bother to buy it, as it is a one note book. If you feel that you must buy it, do yourself a favor and buy the paperback, as it is not a book that you would want to keep. It is a quick, throwaway read.

Nannies
The Nanny Diaries
Published in Audio Cassette by Books on Tape (2002)
Author: Emma McLaughlin
List price:
Used price: $3.99

Average review score:

From the mouth of one nanny....
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2006-04-27
I was reading this book one day at work, and one of my co-workers (who is also a nanny) said that everything in that book was true.

My thoughts? Of course some of the stuff is wildly exaggerated, but that's the beauty of it. We love to hate and mock the rich because of what they represent: what we want and what they have. Let them sit in their chaise lounge chairs and sip martinis by sunrise while we tend to their young, overindulged, often disrespectful, charges. We sneer and thumb our noses at them in silence, as the two former nannies and writers of this book have done.

MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING...
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-14
I had originally thought that this was going to be a work of non-fiction in a nanny tell all. It turned out, instead, to be a mildly funny look at the rich and obnoxious and their young children through the eyes of a spineless nanny. While some of this book is amusing, it is not particularly well written. It is the kind of book you read once, and then promptly forget. It is not a bad book, as it is somewhat entertaining. What this book really represents is what happens when a book grabs the attention of the media. It becomes a best seller. Long after the dust settles, I anticipate that this book will be to the publishing world, what a one hit wonder is to the music industry.

This work of fiction provides caricatures of selfish, self-absorbed, wealthy parents and a peek into the life of their overly-structured and overly-managed offspring. The nanny in question is also a caricature, as she struggles to be appear good hearted, but in the end is just a spineless jellyfish who goes along with the program, no matter how offensive she may find her employers and their demands to be. The nanny tries to come across as an underprivileged, put upon employee, but is, in reality, part of the problem, as she is certainly not a part of the solution. She is an upper middle class young woman who attends a prestigious university. She is hardly one of the hoi polloi, no matter how much she may empathize with those who are truly at the mercy of employers such as the ones found in this book. As social satire this book falls short. Borrow it from the library. Do not bother to buy it, as it is a one note book. If you feel that you must buy it, do yourself a favor and buy the paperback, as it is not a book that you would want to keep. It is a quick, throwaway read.

Nannies
The Nanny World
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Water Hill Pr (1996-07)
Author: H. Olivia Kittrell
List price: $12.00
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Average review score:

An informative guide until the end
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-12
This book was an informatitive guide to the nanny world until the end. The book addressed many of the issues that families hiring nannies face, However on Page 158 the author draws a direct correlation between a nanny being overweight and a nanny neglecting her charges. The author continues to feed into the overweight stereotype stating that overweight nannies "overeat the refridgerator, are most apt to watch tv constantly, do not have the energy to chase toddlers, have emotional and physical problems and prove to be poor role models for children." As a professional overweight nanny who has help raise 2 sets of twins from birth through toddlerhood..this is just not the case and I take great offense. Considering neglect is abuse I would hope that this correlation was drawn from extensive studies from accreditied sources, and not the authors personal feelings. I hope that the loving, nuturing, quality childcare I provide on a consistent basis proves to mean more then my waistline to my employers.

A Must Read for Every Agency Owner and Parent
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1998-06-14
I have read most of the books on nannies out there. For a dose of reality, you must read this book! It is simply the best book about the nanny hiring process in print today! As an agency owner and as someone who has spoken with the author personally, this book must be read if you are hiring or placing nannies.

Nannies
Singer
Published in Hardcover by Viking Juvenile (2005-04-07)
Author: Jean Thesman
List price: $17.99
New price: $1.99
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Average review score:

Like Hitting A Wall
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2005-06-09
Singer is the story of a young girl who has been held captive by her powerful witch mother for 12 years. She finally escapes, and is then passed to an abbey and finally the home of several smart, talented women who are a center of trust in her shaky world. The first half or so of the book rushes by quickly, developing neither characters, settings nor even the plot. However, the book then begins to pick up, gaining maturity and depth, with the introduction of several interesting characters (like King Harry, the Fair Folk outcast guised as a cat). The meat of the book, however, is supposed to be her involvement with the children of Lir, centered around the folk story. Jean Thesman, however, tries to rush most of the plot into the last sixty or so pages of the book, leaving gaping plot holes, one dimensional characters, and confusion.
But the worst part is the ending. Singer's final confrontation with her all-powerful mother, besides being badly explained and hurriedly done, is so pathetic as to be almost laughable. Singer's supposed powers, her supposed sacrifice, do not even come into play, and her mother dies instead when her husband chases her and she falls out of a castle. A page later, the book is over, leaving the reader (me, at least) so unsatisfied I wondered if a chunk of the pages had been ripped out, or if I could get my money back from the library.
To me, there is nothing worse than when a writer writes an interesting and involving book and then is too cowardly or lazy to work out an ending, instead setting down something stupid and quick just to finish the book.
I don't recommend this book to anyone unless they don't plan to finish it. In that case, stop around page 130. It all goes down hill from there.

Dramatic fantasy story based on a classic Irish folktale
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-12
Ever since she was born, Gwenore of Wales has been regarded as a curse by her mother, a truly evil witch named Rhiamon. Gwenore knows that she is different from the blood drop-shaped birthmark that she bears on her left wrist, but she doesn't understand her mother's motives towards her. Just when things couldn't get any worse, Gwenore is accused of murder and locked away in a cellar. Then in the dark of night, Gwenore is rescued by her longtime nursemaid Brennan and a priest-enchanter named Father Caddaric. She is taken to stay at an abbey, uncertain if she will ever see her allies again.

At the abbey, Gwenore is renamed Mary Blondine and is looked after by a nun, Sister Mark. Gwenore is worried by the news of an "aunt" traveling to collect her from the abbey and the crows that seem to know her real name. Despite her anxiety, she gradually begins to learn how to read and write and play music. This skill opens up a whole new world for the girl, who finds herself never wanting to leave. However, Gwenore's journey is just beginning and she is forced to flee once again.

She is then taken by a kindly physician named Margarite to the healing community of Blessingwood in England. There, she is welcomed by her aunt Hildegard and the other women of Blessingwood. Gwenore meets two other refugees named Elaine and Simon; she discovers that she is not the only one with special abilities and is given the chance of having a safe life. She also meets King Harry, a brazen, magical cat, who updates Gwenore of her allies and the enemies she left behind in Wales as well as hints of her true self.

Two years go by, and Gwenore's life --- and her appearance --- has changed. She is now working as Margarite's apprentice and has developed her skills as a musician. Things seem to be going well, until a courageous friend named Tom arrives in Blessingwood with news of her mother and an evil physician rival accusing Margarite of witchcraft. Gwenore and her friends flee to Ireland, but Gwenore ends up on the Island of Lir, where she must protect its kingdom from the evil witch and finally discover who she really is.

SINGER is a great story based on the classic Irish folktale "Children of the Lir." It is a fast-paced, dramatic fantasy that readers will want to read to the very last page.

--- Reviewed by Sarah Sawtelle[...]

Nannies
The 6th Target
Published in Audio Download by audible.com ()
Author: Paetro, James, Maxine Patterson
List price: $29.98
New price: $15.74

Average review score:

Another good one....
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-14
I wasn't excited to pick this one up, but I am glad I did. It keep my attention and actually I like listening to Patterson's books....They flow, are fast paced and easy to follow.....this one didn't disappoint.

6th Target
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-06
as usual James Patterson has given us a spell binding adventure in law and order with the Womens Club. I am looking forward to the TV series.

I miss Alex Cross and would love to read more of his adventures.

Dianne

Started the Series with this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-28
A friend from work recommended this one, even though I had not read any of the earlier books in the series. I really enjoyed the interaction between the four women, and found myself asking questions about the four women.

The Worst in the Series
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-06
I find James Patterson a guilty pleasure, but the entertainment value of his books have been slipping dramatically over the past several years. THE 6TH TARGET is the sixth book in his Womens' Murder Club series, and it's easily the worst.

This book isn't really a novel as much as it's a collection of three underdeveloped crime subplots (plus a severely underdeveloped romantic subplot). None of these storylines is particularly interesting, since Patterson devotes so little space to fleshing them out. Just when one subplot gets going, Patterson abruptly shifts gears and heads to the next one. The result is jarring, and deprives the book of any momentum. The characterization in this book is also quite negligible, which is almost a given in any Patterson book these days.

The first four novels in this series were light fun, but the last two were pretty much a waste of time. 6TH TARGET may be the last in this series that I will spend time with; there are much better books out there.

How did the publisher get so stupid as to accept this?
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-28
This book gets 1 star because I don't know how to review witout giving at least one. What happened to Patterson? He was never a deep writer, never will, I hope, rank as a writer of American classiscs, but this is far below his usual medocrity. Maybe it's the second author; maybe she is really the ghost writer of this novel.

Besides the plot being almost non-existent, the characters are mere cardboard cutouts unable to stand alone. There are apparently a number of books in the "Women's Murder Club" series. Possibly if one has read all of these the characters are more real. Such reading probably dulls the mind so that this book has no effect.

The "novel" has 136 chapters. Perfect for the attention deficit reader. The crimes covered by the heroine, a woman with two dimensions perfect for Hollywood or the tube, are neither connected to the "plot" nor the movement of the text.

Do I regret buying this used book for fifty cents to assuage my boredom while sitting in a hospital waiting room? No. What I regret is reading the whole thing (without the benefit of an Alka-seltzer). My only defense is I'm stubborn. If you can get this for less than a dollar and really need something to numb your mind go ahead and get this.


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