Marrying Up
by Jackie Rose
On This Page
Description
Looking for love in all the highend places... After writing her own obituary as an experiment, Holly Hastings realizes that her life isn't exactly blazing a trail of glory. The twenty-eight-year-old is broke, bored at work and perpetually single. But after watching an old Marilyn Monroe movie she realizes what she can do about it: Marry a millionaire--and write about how to do it! This had to be the answer to the prayers of an obituary writer who's spent more time lauding other people's show more lives than living her own.... Taking leave from her job (if not her senses), Holly decides to better her chances of mingling with the moneyed by getting the heck out of Dodge (aka, Buffalo, New York) and heading to millionaire-rich towns on both coasts. Her honesty and common decency make it hard to fully embrace the shallow life, but Holly finally lands herself an eligible millionaire in San Francisco and an all-expenses-paid trip to Easy Street. Too bad about that inconvenient crush she's developed on her neighbor. Will Holly stick to her plan for marrying up or will she choose marrying right? show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
I picked this book because it was by a Canadian author and I wanted to see what she did in terms of setting. (I'm interested in seeing whether chick lit books set in a Canadian locale get published.) The book started off in Buffalo (at which point a minor character, Jean-Jean, was French-Canadian), included a jaunt to Naples, Florida and ended up in San Francisco.
I don't know how well the author knew her locales. For San Francisco, in particular, I wonder if the author's comments about the heat were factually accurate. (If not, shouldn't an editor have caught this prior to publication?) I was under the impression that the weather in San Francisco was consistently mild; constant sweater-weather, if you will. (A little jaunt over to show more Wikipedia confirms this impression.) But the author makes reference to the heat and the necessity of an air conditioner in a basement apartment, on a few occasions. So it would appear that the author did not let her lack of knowledge of the chosen locales deter her from writing about them. Which is cool for me, should I also eventually take the writing plunge.
Now aside from the locales, I thought this book was much less shallow than it appeared to be. The plot is about Holly, a mid-twenties woman whose been working at a newspaper for several years and who wants to be a journalist but whose frequent story proposals are constantly declined. Holly also aspired to be a published author and decides to write a book on marrying rich (How to Marry a Rich Man and Still Love Yourself in the Morning) which she intends to write from experience as she sets out to find financial success in this manner.
Yet, Holly isn't a shallow woman who only cares about money. She's only frustrated with her life and misguided.
Eventually, her research on marrying rich leads her to San Francisco, where she has found that more young millionaires live than anywhere else. She convinces her best friend George (a woman) to accompany her.
This book isn't about diamonds and fashion and poshness. Nor is it about an extravagant lifestyle. It's just about a young woman finding happiness and, ultimately, love.
It's a really sweet tale, in fact. A pleasant surprise. show less
I don't know how well the author knew her locales. For San Francisco, in particular, I wonder if the author's comments about the heat were factually accurate. (If not, shouldn't an editor have caught this prior to publication?) I was under the impression that the weather in San Francisco was consistently mild; constant sweater-weather, if you will. (A little jaunt over to show more Wikipedia confirms this impression.) But the author makes reference to the heat and the necessity of an air conditioner in a basement apartment, on a few occasions. So it would appear that the author did not let her lack of knowledge of the chosen locales deter her from writing about them. Which is cool for me, should I also eventually take the writing plunge.
Now aside from the locales, I thought this book was much less shallow than it appeared to be. The plot is about Holly, a mid-twenties woman whose been working at a newspaper for several years and who wants to be a journalist but whose frequent story proposals are constantly declined. Holly also aspired to be a published author and decides to write a book on marrying rich (How to Marry a Rich Man and Still Love Yourself in the Morning) which she intends to write from experience as she sets out to find financial success in this manner.
Yet, Holly isn't a shallow woman who only cares about money. She's only frustrated with her life and misguided.
Eventually, her research on marrying rich leads her to San Francisco, where she has found that more young millionaires live than anywhere else. She convinces her best friend George (a woman) to accompany her.
This book isn't about diamonds and fashion and poshness. Nor is it about an extravagant lifestyle. It's just about a young woman finding happiness and, ultimately, love.
It's a really sweet tale, in fact. A pleasant surprise. show less
Enjoyable somewhat fluffy read. More deep than I thought it would be, actually. I enjoyed it overall.
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Marrying Up
- Original publication date
- 2005-08-01
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 36
- Popularity
- 760,101
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.00)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 4
- ASINs
- 2






















































