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Remember Me?

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List Price: $25.00

Our Price: $16.50

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Company: The Dial Press

Author : Sophie Kinsella

Publisher : The Dial Press

Manufacturer : The Dial Press



 

Remember Me? 

Description

Behind The Book: A Note to Amazon Readers from Author Sophie Kinsella

It's hard, in hindsight, to say exactly how a book comes into being. There are so many ideas and themes that get explored and discarded along the way; so many layers that are built up. Plus it's a bit like having a baby—once the hard work is over it becomes a blur!

But with all my novels, I usually start with one little kernel of an idea--and gradually build it up over months of thinking, plotting, the "coffee shop stage" as I call it. With Can you Keep A Secret? it was: what if you told someone all your secrets? With Remember Me? it was: what if you woke up and didn't recognize your life? What if you lost three years of memory--and everything had changed in that time?

All my books involve some kind of wish-fulfilment; some kind of escapism--whether it's shopping, or a whirlwind romance, or stepping off the career treadmill--and Remember Me? is maybe the ultimate form of wish-fulfilment. What if you didn't recognize your life... because it had become so perfect?

The image that kept coming to me was of a girl, blinking up at her Greek God of a husband, whom she doesn't recognize. It made me giggle every time I thought about it. And so I created my amnesiac heroine Lexi, and her perfect new glossy, unrecognizable life--from the new shiny teeth to the designer handbag, to the perfect millionaire husband. The potential for comedy was irresistible.

Another theme I wanted to explore was identity, which I've always found fascinating. Our lives take unpredictable turns and we all change over time. But it's so gradual we don't always notice it. Would your younger self recognize your older self? Put another way, if you woke up tomorrow in the year 2011... what would you find?

I grew incredibly close to Lexi whilst writing this book, and really felt all her ups and downs. I laughed and cried and cringed at every embarrassing moment (of which there are plenty!) I think of all my heroines she has maybe the biggest challenge to face and journey to make--as her biggest obstacle is herself.

I hope you enjoy her journey!




Customer reviews for 'Remember Me?'

«One major problem...»

Honestly, when I'm reading fiction, I only judge a book by how entertaining it is. I'm fairly educated, but unless I'm reading the classics, or at least higher-brow fiction like John Irving or Wally Lamb, I don't rip a book apart based on story structure, continuity, believablity, or even character development. I know they're important, but I don't really care. There have been times I've loved books that had no strengths in these areas, and books I've hated that have had all of them. SOmetimes, I don't even know why I dislike them--even if the plot appeals to me, I either get into a book or I don't, and I can't put my finger on why.
So, I'm not even going to get into Kinsella's habit of creating one dimensional characters, or their unbelievability, or that they weren't given their full potential. Her books are entertaining as hell, and that's all I care about.
Remember Me? wasn't as good as her others. I've already re-read it, it's not awful, but it just fell a little flat--maybe as one of those "Gotta meet my deadline when I have so many better things to do" books. Everyone that has a favorite author has had to deal with one of these--when the author's heart just isn't in it. I think that's what happened here. Lexi wasn't the type of character I could be invested in--I'd love to hang out with Becky Bloomwood and Emma Corrington, even have afew drinks with Samantha Sweeting. Lexi just seemed weak and depressed, and the famous Kinsella humor failed to inject her with any warmth.
My main issues--
For one thing, I --SPOILER ALERT--wish her memory had returned.
I NEVER understood the whole marriage thing. I know she --SPOILER ALERT--struggled with her father screwing her family financially, but she was obviously successful in her own right, why marry a guy that prints invoices for his own wife? How could she have stomached the Monte Blanc in the first place?
And, my main problem--why the infedility in the first place? They never explained it. Okay, the sunflowers showed they had obviously been at it quite awhile, and the fact that Lexi was her "real self" over there shows she never drank the Kool-Aid. She obviously didn't love her husband--why wait so long to leave him? It didn't make sense.

[Friday, September 05, 2008]

«A disappointed Sophie Kinsella fan...small spoiler»

I LOVE Sophie Kinsella...but I was very disappointed with this book. Not as unique in voice as her other books, plus the whole book's "romance" was based on an affair.

[Saturday, August 30, 2008]

«Where's Jennifer Garner?»

Lexi wakes up from a conk on the head to find that three years have gone by -- and disappeared from her memory. Her sketchy boyfriend, Loser Dave, has been replaced by a gorgeous, rich (and quite stuffy) husband, Eric. Her best gal pals have become virtual strangers, and her hair has somehow become a gorgeous main, all the better to highlight her newly straightened teeth and collagened lips.

The only problem? Her new life doesn't quite fit the old Lexi. She wants things as they were, and is going to do her best to get them back.

Of all Kinsella's book, this is my least favorite. It has some of her traditional standbys -- a slightly goofy yet loveable main character, kooky minor characters, and a totally unbelievable yet charming premise.

The problem is, I felt like I was reading a bad novelized version of "Thirteen Going on Thirty." And the movie was much better than this book.

It isn't a BAD book. It was just a little boring in spots, and not nearly as cute as the movie. Go with Jennifer Garner instead.

[Saturday, August 30, 2008]



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