Whole Lotta Trouble
by Stephanie Bond
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Description
A humorous romantic mystery! Sometimes the best laid plans go sideways... Three single female mystery book editors in Manhattan have personal and professional problems galore-which seem to intersect with one bad-boy agent. When they set out to humiliate their problematic playboy, their plans go horribly awry. Toss in a missing manuscript worth millions, a sexy cop too smart for their good, and a plot twist on a scope larger than anyone could have imagined, and the women suddenly realize that show more when it comes to friendship, flirtation and felony, they're in a WHOLE LOTTA TROUBLE!. show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
I've read a lot of Bond books, and this one is definitely one of my favorites. There was so much going on in this story, it kept me guessing literally the whole way through.
Somethings to highlight: I loved the friendship between Tallie and Felicia. While these women were complete opposites, their friendship was real and strong. The sub-story lines between them and each of their mothers was also good. I loved how Felicia was basically an undercover Martha Stewart type---doing all the cleaning, baking, etc, all the while no one had any idea (especially her mom).
The romance between Tallie and Keith is sweet and steamy but not over the top. The mystery plot is one of the books strongest points. You really have no idea who is behind it all, show more and the ending is outrageous (in a good way!)
This book is called a romantic mystery and I would agree. I would also recommend it to my friends who read chick lit/women's fiction because the Tallie and Felicia's friendship and story is strong in and of itself (it's not all about Keith like a traditional romance).
I laughed out loud at some of the scenes, and I couldn't wait to keep reading to see how it ended up. Would highly recommend. show less
Somethings to highlight: I loved the friendship between Tallie and Felicia. While these women were complete opposites, their friendship was real and strong. The sub-story lines between them and each of their mothers was also good. I loved how Felicia was basically an undercover Martha Stewart type---doing all the cleaning, baking, etc, all the while no one had any idea (especially her mom).
The romance between Tallie and Keith is sweet and steamy but not over the top. The mystery plot is one of the books strongest points. You really have no idea who is behind it all, show more and the ending is outrageous (in a good way!)
This book is called a romantic mystery and I would agree. I would also recommend it to my friends who read chick lit/women's fiction because the Tallie and Felicia's friendship and story is strong in and of itself (it's not all about Keith like a traditional romance).
I laughed out loud at some of the scenes, and I couldn't wait to keep reading to see how it ended up. Would highly recommend. show less
An early book in the Stephanie Bond world. 3 women in the publishing world & 1 swarmy agent they exact revenge on. One part romance, one part murder, one part mystery. Who killed Jerry & why. Fast paced read. A few unanswered questions on Felicia but otherwise a good read
As someone who works in the publishing industry myself, I got an extra thrill out of it being the setting for this book! It was funny, it was mysterious, it was romantic; everything as advertised.
There were a few laugh-out-loud moments and a few groan-out-loud moments in this romantic comedy with murder. Centered around a publishing house and featuring several women who are trying to survive in the cut-throat world of publishing. When a ruthless womanising agent turns up dead they're all suspects.
It's light stuff and quite fun but not very memorable.
It's light stuff and quite fun but not very memorable.
This is my first Stephanie Bond book and I'm sure won't be my last. It's a cute mystery with some romance thrown in. Three women, a cute cop, and a missing manuscript... all make a good fun read.
From Amazon:
When three young female New York editors come up with a sassy scheme to publicly expose a notoriously womanizing literary agent, little do they imagine he'll end up not just naked (and tied up in S/M gear) but dead. All do, however, have motives for murder: the smarmy fellow has personally humiliated successful Felicia Redmon, professionally backstabbed not-so-successful Tallie Blankenship and plagiarized the plot of a book that means the world to ambitious Jan Glass. So confessing that they were the last to see their tormentor alive is likely to make them prime suspects, even in the eyes of Tallie's protective new cop boyfriend. But if they stay silent, they may wind up being the real murderer's next victims. While whodunit show more isn't revealed till the book's surprise ending, the suspense isn't the kind that kills you. As is typical of Bond's books (Party Crashers, etc.), the overall tone is deliciously frothy, and small comedic details abound: high-powered Felicia is a secret super housewife who cleans, cooks and lies about it, and Jan has changed her name from plain "Jane" to appear more glamorously French. And though romance is not the book's main focus, there's enough love between the laughs to keep relationship-minded readers happy.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. show less
When three young female New York editors come up with a sassy scheme to publicly expose a notoriously womanizing literary agent, little do they imagine he'll end up not just naked (and tied up in S/M gear) but dead. All do, however, have motives for murder: the smarmy fellow has personally humiliated successful Felicia Redmon, professionally backstabbed not-so-successful Tallie Blankenship and plagiarized the plot of a book that means the world to ambitious Jan Glass. So confessing that they were the last to see their tormentor alive is likely to make them prime suspects, even in the eyes of Tallie's protective new cop boyfriend. But if they stay silent, they may wind up being the real murderer's next victims. While whodunit show more isn't revealed till the book's surprise ending, the suspense isn't the kind that kills you. As is typical of Bond's books (Party Crashers, etc.), the overall tone is deliciously frothy, and small comedic details abound: high-powered Felicia is a secret super housewife who cleans, cooks and lies about it, and Jan has changed her name from plain "Jane" to appear more glamorously French. And though romance is not the book's main focus, there's enough love between the laughs to keep relationship-minded readers happy.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. show less
You can read my review here: http://abshepherdsreinventedreader.blogspot.com.au/2012/06/whole-lotta-trouble-b...
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 2004-09-28
- People/Characters
- Felecia Redmon; Tallie Blankenship; Jerry Key; Jane Glass
- Important places
- Manhattan, New York, New York, USA
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 180
- Popularity
- 181,320
- Reviews
- 7
- Rating
- (3.95)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 10
- ASINs
- 3




























































