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Nabaza.net-The MarketPlace - Lessons

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List Price: $19.99
Our Price: $13.59
Your Save: $ 6.40 ( 32% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: P.D. Publishing, Inc.
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9781933720081 ISBN: 1933720085 Label: P.D. Publishing, Inc. Manufacturer: P.D. Publishing, Inc. Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 304 Publication Date: 2006-10-19 Publisher: P.D. Publishing, Inc. Studio: P.D. Publishing, Inc.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Chase Marin is an 18 year-old girl filled with more confusion than common sense. A daughter of affluent parents, Chase is expected to go to college at the University of Arizona and prove herself as equally successful as her big sister. How can she do that when she doesn't even know herself? Dagny Robertson is everything that the Marin's would want in a daughter - too bad Dagney's own parents don't even know their only child, borne from their intense love, exists. Now, Dagny works on her graduate degree while acting as a TA in Psych 101. Can this older woman, once the worshipped babysitter of a lost eight year-old girl, help Chase find herself?
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: I certainly relate to this one. Comment: The plot of this work has been very well documented in several of the very fine reviews on this page so I need not go into that with this short review; actually, review probably is not a good word here, lets call this a testimonial of sorts. Good lesbian fiction is difficult to find. What I mean by good, I mean well written and written by a true teller of stories. With this work that is exactly what we get. I have read this one several times and enjoy it more with each reading.
I suppose I can relate to Chase's situation and background so closely that I tend to identify with her and that of course makes the story that much more dear to me. Her relationship with her parents touches me and I have felt so much what she has felt. I too have had a Dagny in my life.
This work may not be for everyone, but I certainly am glad I found it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: FINDING MYSELF Comment: I love this book. I've read it about a dozen times and I am most definitely buying other books written by this author.
Customer Rating:      Summary: One Worth Reading And Re-Reading Comment: I adore this book. The characters seem so real and it's so easy to fall in love with both of them. It starts off slow, and I felt that sometimes the description of what the characters were wearing was a bit much but it picks up. There are quite a few editing errors in the novel (like Dagny's name being spelled Dagney some of the time) but nothing that I felt would take away from a five star rating. The story is easy to become absorbed in and, unlike most books, I enjoyed this book even more the second read.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Wish there were more books like it! Comment: In a world with too few lesbian novels, especially those surrounding the younger generation, Kim Pritekel brings us a wonderful novel.
Lessons is very well-written, and it is a fantastic story that is both believable and realistic. There are many reviews that already described the story itself, so I won't go into too much detail, but I just wanted to say that I loved this book.
(And just incase any of you care, there is a very beautiful love scene, that is tasteful, not trashy! read thissss!!)
Customer Rating:      Summary: Earnest, but poorly written Comment: It's hard to find good lesbian fiction, and I chose this book because it was reviewed so highly on Amazon. I was disappointed. The author is clearly passionate about her subject matter, but the writing is seriously flawed. I don't normally buy into the idea that there are "rules" for writing--after all, those who are firmly in control of their craft bend and break such rules all the time--but too often Pritekel falls into the trap of "telling" rather than "showing." For example, the narrator frequently informs us that some character is "interesting" or "so interesting" without demonstrating through the dialogue what precisely the main character finds captivating. As a result, though Chase may be interested, the reader is bored. The dialogue itself falls flat; Pritekal aims to capture youthful speech by inserting the f-word (or the occasional "hell yeah") practically every other sentence; the language is distracting and makes all of the characters sound the same. (I have no problem with profanity, by the way, but here it is overused; there was a good article in "Poets and Writers" magazine many months back about the using profanity judiciously). Major plot developments in the novel are signaled in advance by obvious and cliched symbolism--Chase's failed swimming lesson at the beginning of the book, for example--and the secondary characters are rarely believable. Finally, this book is desperately in need of a good edit (which is no fault of the author). There are typos and misspellings throughout, many of which make the book unintentionally funny, as when, at the height of a sex scene, a character lets out a "grown." I wanted to like this book, but both the plot and the prose come across as juvenile and ultimately unconvincing.
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