A Hollywood Ending

by Robyn Sisman

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Paige Carson - starlet, diva, mess. The daughter of an 80s soap star and a rock god, it's no wonder Paige has no idea what 'normal' means. And Hollywood life isn't helping. She's sick of working with her latest co-star, a boorish Aussie heartthrob, sick of being told she's over-the-hill at 29, and sick of dates that are nothing more than PR stunts. So when she's offered a Shakespearean role on the London stage, it seems the perfect chance to get away from LA-LA land, gain some artistic show more cachet and catch up with her best friend who quit the States and the music business for a new life as lady of the manor with her British husband. But Paige is in for a surprise. London is damper, dirtier and far more carb-heavy than the life she's accustomed to. As opening night looms, Paige must learn not only how to ditch her Dick Van Dyke attempt at an English accent, but how to stand on her own two feet for the first time. And though she may not have her therapist on speed-dial, on her way she'll find real friends and maybe love, too. show less

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6 reviews
I thoroughly enjoyed the latest confection from Robyn Sisman, half of which takes place in Hollywood, half in London. Sisman does a great job capturing the culture of each place and creates a lovable character in Paige, an unabashed yet innocent diva. She meets her match in Ed, a crusty intellectual who has a thing or two to learn about love; and the breathless plot, involving movies, malicious reporters and a Shakespeare play staged in a crumbling theater, keeps things moving along nicely. I thought this was one of Sisman's better offerings.
Originally posted at Curled Up With a Good Book and reprinted at http://www.skrishnasbooks.com

A Hollywood Ending is about a woman named Paige Carson. But Paige isn’t just any woman; she is a Hollywood megastar with an Oscar under her belt. That Oscar isn’t enough to console her when she starts fretting about the future of her career, especially after being humiliated on set by a co-star who thinks Paige doesn’t have any real acting talent. That fear, coupled with numerous disappointments and upsets in her personal life, drives her to England to perform in a theatre production of the Bard’s As You Like It. Not only does Shakespeare make Paige question whether she actually can act, but getting used to England takes some adjusting, show more especially considering that she is living without the creature comforts she has become so accustomed to.

Surprisingly, the thing Paige finds most difficult about England is her landlord, Ed. A documentary filmmaker with his own troubles, Ed thinks that the last thing he needs is some spoiled famous person living in the house that was supposed to be his. They are both in for a surprise as they realize that opposites attract and they may need each other more than they think.

Robyn Sisman’s book is a classic fairy tale-type story about the rich, bratty girl who ends up being more than she seems. At the beginning, Paige seems like a spoiled brat who can’t be happy for anyone else because she seems to be having a mid-life crisis (albeit an early one.) By the end of the book, it is revealed that she is simply human, with doubts like any other girl. When faced with less-than-stellar circumstances, Paige acts out, and those unappealing parts of her personality come forward. In England, though she is presented with circumstances that aren’t exactly what she’s used to, she still measures up admirably. It is difficult to feel sorry for her when she realizes that she must walk to the theater as it doesn’t provide a car service. Of course that must be shocking to someone in that situation, but as a car service isn’t something the general public who will be reading this book has access to, it just makes Paige seem like more of a brat. She adjusts well, and these “shocks” quickly disappear. One does wonder, though, what she will be like upon her return to Hollywood. Will she return to the Paige we see at the beginning of the book, or is the change permanent? The book is simply too short and does not delve deep enough into Paige’s character to be able to tell.

The character of Paige herself was interesting. Sisman seems to have loosely based the character on the actress Liv Tyler. After all, Paige Carson is the daughter of aging rock god Ty Carson, and had a small role in the film “Journey to Mount Doom,” while Liv Tyler is the daughter of Aerosmith singer Steven Tyler, and had a small role in the film series “Lord of the Rings.” It doesn’t really have any bearing on the storyline, it just is an interesting observation.

The book has the predictable dramatic twist right before the ending, but that end is so short that the reader is left with a sense of dissatisfaction. There is no telling how her performance went, how it was received by the critics, and what choices she made for her life after the show was finished. Rarely do I say that I wish a book was longer, but I wish that Sisman had fleshed out more of the conclusion of Paige’s story.

Overall, while A Hollywood Ending is predictable, it is still enjoyable - a sort of Notting Hill without the awkwardly hilarious comedy of Hugh Grant. It fits snugly into the chick lit genre: cute, with a little bit of fun.
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A fun read and a great romance. The characters were well fleshed out, at least the ones that were meant to be 3D. The shallow ones were convincingly portrayed!
It was really hard to like both the main characters at first and I'm not really sure they got all that much better, but I think we were supposed to become sympathetic. Overall, I liked the book, but the ending was pretty abrupt - ending 2 pages after the protagonists finally get together.
i wasn't sure i was going to make it through this book when i started. paige carson, the protagonist, starts as a bratty, spoiled, selfish, childish hollywood star. the book definitely dragged for me in the hollywood setting. once she ends up in london and meets ed, maddy, fizz & a few others, the book definitely improved for me. her character did evolve, as much as can be done in a chick-lit book, and yes, it's a predictable happy ending but it wasn't so terrible after all.
½
Perfect mindless chick-lit/beach/weekend book.
As in all chick lit, the girl-guy get together in the end and everything is just like "real life" - perfect!
Paige Carson is a famous Julia Roberts type character. Life is not all roses, and she flies to London to "act" in Shakespeare play and meets landlord Ed, a documentary film producer with morals. Guess what happens?

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11+ Works 1,450 Members
Robyn Sisman was born in Los Angeles, California in 1955. She worked as a secretary at Oxford University Press before becoming an editor there. She later worked at J M Dent, the UK arm of Simon and Schuster, and Hutchinson. Her first novel, Special Relationship, published in 1995. Her other novels included Just Friends, Perfect Strangers, Weekend show more in Paris, Summer in the City, A Hollywood Ending, and The Perfect Couple. She died following a battle with cancer on May 20, 2016. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction, Romance
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3569 .I75 .H65Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
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107
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302,049
Reviews
6
Rating
(2.83)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Audiobook
ISBNs
12
ASINs
2