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Laura Wolf

Author of Diary of a Mad Bride

7+ Works 756 Members 10 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Laura Wolf is a native New Yorker and up-and-coming screenwriter who lives in Los Angeles with her husband. (Bowker Author Biography)

Includes the name: Laura Wolf

Works by Laura Wolf

Associated Works

American Girls About Town (2004) — Contributor — 320 copies, 4 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1967
Gender
female

Members

Reviews

11 reviews
Told in diary form by Amy and spread out over the course of a year, "Diary of A Mad Bride" is an occasionally amusing novel about the events leading up to the marriage of Amy Thomas and Stephen Stewart. As the book opens, Amy's friend Mandy is in a dither about getting married and Amy swears that she'll never get married. Of course, she quickly changes her mind when Stephen proposes but she then swears that she won't be as uptight about her wedding as Mandy was. Naturally that too changes, show more as Amy encounters all kinds of calamities leading up and including her wedding day.

This is a light and at times funny novel. Anyone who's been married, is about to be married, or been a bridesmaid will recognize some of the problems Amy goes through while planning her wedding. Amy's mood swings are particularly funny and there's a lot of reality in her attempts to juggle planning the wedding and working full time. But she too often seems almost disconnected from her own wedding. Although she makes incredibly long lists of things to do for the wedding, she never makes much progress on them. Far too many scenes seem to be written just for the humor - it can't be that difficult to find the perfect wedding gown in all of New York City and I find it hard to believe that Amy would agree to wear her mother's wedding gown sight unseen. And, I realize the book was written this way for the humor, but the wedding felt rushed, especially due to the lack of money Amy and Stephen had. Other scenes that potentially could be mined for humor like trying to figure out place settings, a headache for any bride are left untouched. And what bride would not be involved in picking out the Maid of Honor and Bridesmaid dresses? Or just go to the hairdresser the day of the wedding and let the hairdresser do what they want?

In the end, "Diary of A Mad Bride" seems to have been written in much the same rush as Amy and Stephen's wedding was planned. It's an okay read, but with a little more preparation it could have been great reading.
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I read this book when I was about 14 or 15 and I loved it so much I must have read it 3 times. It's a hilarious story about a sort of anti-bride who ends up getting sucked into the whole bride-zilla culture that has taken over weddings these days!
It's funny, endearing, and I can imagine the stress a bride would feel with all these impossible odds. I gave it a 4 because I believe in its genre (what I would definitely call chick lit) it's pretty damn good!
Another (very) light summer read, this time about Amy Thomas who's content being single, happily dating Stephen, and wondering what has come over her friend Mandy, who's getting married and spends all her time planning and talking about her wedding.

Then, in the concession line at a movie theater, Stephen asks Amy to marry him (what an awful way to stage one's proposal!), and suddenly she has her own wedding to plan, and it's overwhelming.

Her wedding to-do list grows from a modest 20 items show more to a whopping 70, and Stephen is no help at all (well, when are men ever a help at wedding preparations huh?). Before she knows it, Amy has turned into the "mad bride" she's always rolled her eyes at.

Funny but wholly unbelievable most of the time, as we chart her (mis-) adventures (presented in diary entry format) and I shake my head at the pre-wedding jitters that's endless: obscenely expensive shoes and humiliating dresses, in-laws even more upsetting than one's own parents and siblings, bitchy co-workers and a stoned caterer, etc. No wonder she went crazy!

Predictably, everything turns out perfectly alright in the end (how was that possible??) like a "...and they lived happily ever after" delivered in a cherry syrup tone at the end.

Book Details:

Title Diary of a Mad Bride
Author Laura Wolf
Reviewed By Purplycookie
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This one is a pleasure. Light, amusing, wry. Generally I am not a fan of books written in the form of diary entries, but this one was amusing enough to work.

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Rating
½ 3.4
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