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Erin Duffy

Author of Bond Girl

6+ Works 901 Members 47 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: Erin Duffy

Image credit: via HarperCollins

Works by Erin Duffy

Bond Girl (2012) 229 copies, 25 reviews
How We Get Food (2009) 224 copies
Food For You (2006) 223 copies
On the Rocks (2014) 113 copies, 18 reviews
Regrets Only (2018) 66 copies, 3 reviews
Lost Along the Way (2016) 46 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

Fake News: A Roadmap (2018) — Author — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female
Education
Georgetown University
Places of residence
New York, New York, USA
Associated Place (for map)
New York, USA

Members

Reviews

48 reviews
Social media can be a wonderful thing. It keeps us connected to family and friends we might not otherwise see or hear from very often. It is an easy way to connect and to share, the good, the sad, and the ever day stuff of our lives. But it can have a darker side too. Thanks to social media, we know when we are the only ones not invited to the party or when we missed a really fun time. We have a tangible measure of who our friends really are. But it can be even worse than that. Thanks to the show more relationship status on platforms like Facebook, we can have our hearts broken in public. The main character in Erin Duffy's newest novel, On the Rocks, has this very thing happen to her.

Abby is trying on wedding dresses with her best friend Grace when Grace notices that Abby's fiance Ben has changed his relationship status to single. With one click of the mouse, her entire life changes, completely devastating her. Abby and Ben have been together for ten years. Their relationship is comfortable, in fact, Ben compares it to a comfy but tatty old sock you can't bring yourself to throw out. A work opportunity comes up for him, one that involves moving across the country, he takes a closer look at their spark-free relationship, and chooses to break things off before he leaves. But this decision comes out of the blue for Abby and she crumbles. She holes up in her apartment, watching tv, binging on ice cream, and wearing sweats. She's turned into a cliche. She also has to try and pull herself together to pretend pleasure for his younger sister's engagement and the run up to that wedding, which is unlikely to be cancelled, like her own was. Finally Grace has had enough and convinces Abby that she needs a change of scenery. As a kindergarten teacher, Abby's summers are free so she and Grace can rent a place in Newport Beach and try to break Abby out of her depression. The summer can also give Grace time to examine the future of her own relationship, an affair with a married colleague.

Although Abby's not so sure she can get back into the dating world and just be Abby instead of being Abby and Ben (after all, she's still responding to Ben's texts to her), she agrees to try. With the help of a former classmate of Grace's, a currently unemployed smart alecky lawyer named Bobby, who offers to be her wingman, and his friend Wolf, a German caddy wanting to perfect his English, Abby might dip a toe back in the single girl pool. But once bitten, twice shy, and she's not going to do it with her technology intact, deleting her Facebook account. Abby has some truly hilarious attempts at dating but more importantly, she works on accepting friendships, with Bobby and Wolf as well as with Lara, the seemingly perfect woman whose shop she ends up working in and who went to her high school.

The cover of this novel throws it firmly in the chick lit firmament but unlike many chick lit novels, finding a man will not make Abby whole or more complete. The novel is more firmly focused on the power and value of friendship and support than romantic love despite everyone urging Abby to date all the time. Abby is alternately vulnerable and a pain in the ass as she works through the death of her relationship and she comes to the knowledge that Ben wasn't wrong about the state of them and that she deserves to have more than just a comfortable and familiar, spark-free relationship. Bobby and Wolf are great supporting characters, adding levity to the story and calling Abby out on her moods. Grace has her own issues, the married boyfriend, which ultimately show Abby that she has to do more than mope about her own situation and be present for her friend. Having to come to terms with her younger sister's wedding and happiness, as well as recognizing and empathizing with Lara's deep despair are just two more ways that Abby's selfish self-absorption are challenged over her summer of healing. There is a lot of levity in the writing and the tone stays generally light and breezy. This is a quick read about the value of friendship with just enough quirky characters to balance out the inevitable heartbreaks. It may not stay with you long past closing the book but it's fun and frothy enough to be a perfect read when you have your toes buried in the sand and the sun shining overhead.
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This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Who knew there was a subgenre of The War on Women on Wall St! Bond Girl is a great big treat, though the blatant sexism is pretty nauseating and hardly unexpected. It's the stuff that lawsuits are made of. Alex Garrett is a good looking, smart Ivy grad hired as an entry level analyst in a bond trading group. Her boss is a ridiculous tyrant and Alex wants only to please. The pranks pulled by her frat boy co-workers are sometimes amusing, but the entire operation centers on working insane show more hours for big bonuses and psychic and physical devastation. Hardly worth it but Alex soldiers on as the plot races towards Lehman Day and the collapse of her world. I truly enjoyed this slice of It's A Horrible Life. show less
Narrated by Robin Gwyne. This was a great listen for the work commute. Gwyne very effectively voiced Alex as a college graduate embarking on an exciting career on Wall Street. It was like listening to a girlfriend dishing and bitching about her daily dramas. Alex not only is learning the ropes and keeping up the quick pace of her job, but as one of the few women in the workplace, she's also bearing the brunt of masculine attitudes and sexual harassment (her boss calls her "Girlie" and a show more creepy client is frighteningly inappropriate towards her). The author worked on Wall Street for many years, so if this is the reality, it's quite horrifying. But it makes for intriguing glad-that's-not-me entertainment and Alex can be very humorous even at the end of her rope. show less
So many "beach read" books tend to be shallow, fluffy, predictable and dumbed-down, however this book surprised me by being so much more than the average "beach read." This book was written intelligently, geared toward an older crowd (Abby is in her 30s, not straight out of college, which makes her more 3-dimensional with a career and having lived life as an adult for a while), and not bubble-gum sweet, based nicely in realistic believability. Abby, 31-year-old Kindergarten teacher is trying show more on wedding dresses when she finds out via her best friend Grace, who finds out via Facebook that her boyfriend of 10 years has changed his relationship status to Single. This is the least believable part of the book, by the way. Luckily, in the face of a humiliating break-up, Grace has a great opportunity to rent a beach house in Newport Beach for the summer and invites Abby to share it with her. Abby meets Grace's quirky ladies-man friend Bobby and his roommate from Germany, Wolf, and they quickly become a tight summer group who bar-hops and watches each others' backs. Although Bobby annoys Abby to no end, she eventually realizes what a loyal friend he is and sees him in a different light. The summer sees Abby go from a kicked puppy with little confidence to a strong single woman ready to face the dating world again. I never once rolled my eyes while reading this book, which says a lot for this genre. I truly enjoyed this grown-up version of a break-up beach read story and would recommend it to any of my girlfriends. Thank you for the copy via LibraryThing! show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
6
Also by
1
Members
901
Popularity
#28,453
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
47
ISBNs
45
Languages
1
Favorited
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