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The Smart One and the Pretty One

di Claire LaZebnik

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23121116,376 (3.27)16
"This sparkling novel about two sisters is both witty and stylish. Even if you don't have a sister of your own, you won't be able to resist LaZebnik's charming take on modern relationships. Read it!" - Holly Peterson, bestselling author of The Manny When Ava Nickerson was a child, her mother jokingly betrothed her to a friend's son, and the contract the parents made has stayed safely buried for years. Now that still-single Ava is closing in on thirty, no one even remembers she was once "engaged" to the Markowitz boy. But when their mother is diagnosed with cancer, Ava's prodigal little sister Lauren comes home to Los Angeles where she stumbles across the decades-old document. Frustrated and embarrassed by Ava's constant lectures about financial responsibility (all because she's in a little debt. Okay, a lot of debt), Lauren decides to do some sisterly interfering of her own and tracks down her sister's childhood fiancé. When she finds him, the highly inappropriate, twice-divorced, but incredibly charming Russell Markowitz is all too happy to re-enter the Nickerson sisters' lives, and always-accountable Ava is forced to consider just how binding a contract really is . . .… (altro)
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Very reminescent of Jennifer Weiner's "In Her Shoes," without the grandma or the suicidal mother. This mother is battling cancer and the parts that deal with that are what saves this book from being just any other chick lit novel. The sisters relationship was believable but their attraction to a couple of men was less so. Didn't like the guys and couldn't cheer for the couples to hook up. ( )
  mamashepp | Mar 29, 2016 |
Very reminescent of Jennifer Weiner's "In Her Shoes," without the grandma or the suicidal mother. This mother is battling cancer and the parts that deal with that are what saves this book from being just any other chick lit novel. The sisters relationship was believable but their attraction to a couple of men was less so. Didn't like the guys and couldn't cheer for the couples to hook up. ( )
  mamashepp | Mar 29, 2016 |
I liked that the focus of this story was on the sisters and their family dynamic. Otherwise, it was a pretty average chick lit novel. My only issue - I didn't really see what attracted Ava to Russell. He wasn't a total ass or anything, but dude had baggage and I couldn't shake the slight gay vibe. Maybe I'm just too used to the Alpha-male type. ( )
  Jac8604 | May 14, 2010 |
I alternated between loving this book and being very annoyed by it. I spent more time in the enjoying it side, but got more annoyed as the book went on.I liked the family relationships in the book. I enjoyed the byplay between the sisters, and how they went about reestablishing their friendship. I found both sisters to be interesting characters.Lauren needs to grow up, but she's got a good heart. Her sister Ava is trying to help her in the growing up department. Sometimes she appreciates this, sometimes she doesn't. Ava's been grown up for a long time. She's always taken life seriously. She wants to share this with her younger sister.What I didn't like what the message about appearance. The characters say that beauty isn't important, but ignoring your appearance is. The fact that these conversations take place between two gorgeous size 6 women doesn't help. ( )
  ImBookingIt | Mar 26, 2010 |
Ava and Lauren Nickerson have their distinct roles — and they play them well. Lawyer Ava, the older sister, is rational, organized and the caretaker, while wild child retail employee Lauren is scatter-brained, flirty and loose . . . with her money. The girls are brought together in Los Angeles after their mother is diagnosed with cancer, and Lauren is forced to finally confront her issues with spending and immaturity while Ava, always the stable one, must find a way to open up — both to her family and the potential for love.

Claire LaZebnik’s The Smart One And The Pretty One is the story of two sisters trying to understand each other as adults — while simultaneously boosting each other as they share difficult experiences. And though I wanted to like the Nickerson girls and cheer for them from the get-go, I just had too many issues with this book.

Firstly, both sisters felt like such stereotypes to me. Ava is a lawyer (yes, of course she is) while Lauren worked at a fashionable boutique, stocking up on clothes and other items she couldn’t really afford. She’s materialistic — and a little bratty. She craves the spotlight and demands it of everyone in her life. In terms of stereotypes, she’s the poster child for “youngest sister,” while Ava has her post as “mature big sister” all locked up.

I never felt like I really got to know either of them. I was standing at a distance, looking in as they dealt with their myriad of problems. Part of what kept me disconnected was the narrative voice — third person — and the fact that I couldn’t get into the minds of either woman. The novel would have functioned better for me if it were told by one of the sisters — preferrably Ava because she annoyed me far less, though Lauren’s insight might have helped me understand her better as a character.

Because as it was? Lauren was not in my good graces. A subplot develops where she meets Daniel, a man who is caring for his sick mother at the hospital where Mrs. Nickerson is getting care. And Daniel? A world-class, first-rate, total and complete jackass. I could spot that from the second he was described as yelling at the hospital staff — yelling – in a quiet corridor of the facility reserved for sick cancer patients. He's dealing with his mother's terminal illness, I understand that, but he grated on every sensibility I have. And the fact that Ava, after meeting Daniel, doesn’t say something to her sister about what a jerk this guy obviously is annoyed me even more. If my little sister showed up with some loser in my apartment, you better believe I’d be giving that guy such an evil eye that he wouldn’t be even glancing at my sister from then on.

Meh, I could continue on . . . mostly about what I disliked about the individual characters and plot. But that seems a little unnecessary. While we saw the Nickerson daughters evolve by the end of the novel, it just wasn’t enough to redeem them in my eyes. While LaZebnik can certainly write, I didn’t identify or like any of her characters — and like a fight with my own sister, The Smart One And The Pretty One left me with an unsettled feeling in my stomach. ( )
  writemeg | Jan 26, 2010 |
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For my father, Mel Scovell, who has always reminded me that "a writer is someone who writes," words that spurred me on to find a way to put something down on paper even when I had only little bits and pieces of spare time.
And by the way, Dad, I'm actually glad you made me memorize "The Love Song Of J. Alfred Prufrock" when I was twelve. Turns out I really do measure out my life with coffee spoons.
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"Your sister is on the phone," Jeremy said as Ava approached his desk and snagged a Hershey's Kiss out of his candy dish.
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"This sparkling novel about two sisters is both witty and stylish. Even if you don't have a sister of your own, you won't be able to resist LaZebnik's charming take on modern relationships. Read it!" - Holly Peterson, bestselling author of The Manny When Ava Nickerson was a child, her mother jokingly betrothed her to a friend's son, and the contract the parents made has stayed safely buried for years. Now that still-single Ava is closing in on thirty, no one even remembers she was once "engaged" to the Markowitz boy. But when their mother is diagnosed with cancer, Ava's prodigal little sister Lauren comes home to Los Angeles where she stumbles across the decades-old document. Frustrated and embarrassed by Ava's constant lectures about financial responsibility (all because she's in a little debt. Okay, a lot of debt), Lauren decides to do some sisterly interfering of her own and tracks down her sister's childhood fiancé. When she finds him, the highly inappropriate, twice-divorced, but incredibly charming Russell Markowitz is all too happy to re-enter the Nickerson sisters' lives, and always-accountable Ava is forced to consider just how binding a contract really is . . .

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