PalmIslandYachts.com - Guide to Cruising and Cruising Ships

 Search
 Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Beaches » General AAS » How to Teach Filthy Rich GirlsDecember 1, 2008  


Categories
Guide to Cruising
Travel Guide
Map Guide
Travel Insurance
Vacation Guide
Beaches
Cruises
Family Package Vacations
Life Insurance
Travel Insurance
How to Teach Filthy Rich Girls
How to Teach Filthy Rich Girls
enlarge
Author: Zoey Dean
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Category: Book

List Price: $13.99
Buy New: $3.03
You Save: $10.96 (78%)
Buy New/Used from $3.03

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars(15 reviews)
Sales Rank: 51486

Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.2 x 1

ISBN: 0446697184
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN: 9780446697187
ASIN: 0446697184

Publication Date: July 3, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Recent Yale graduate Megan Smith comes to Manhattan with big plans for a career in journalism and even bigger student loan debt: $75,000. When she flails at her trashy tabloid job, she's given an escape hatch: tutor seventeen-year-old identical twins Rose and Sage Baker--yes, the infamous Baker heiresses of Palm Beach, Florida, best known for their massive fortunes and their penchant for drunkenly flashing the paparazzi -- and get their SAT scores up enough to get into Duke. Impossible job -- yes. But if she succeeds, her student debts are history. Unfortunately for Megan, the Baker twins aren't about to curtail their busy social schedules for basic algebra. And they certainly aren't thrilled to have to sit down for a study session with dowdy Megan. Megan quickly discovers that if she's going to get her money, she'll have to learn her Pucci from her Prada. And if she can look the part, maybe, just maybe, she can teach the girls something along the way.


Customer Reviews:   Read 10 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Easy and light   August 19, 2008
This was a fun, light read. I honestly believe that the book would be better suited for a young adult reader despite the fact that there is a pretty light romantic scene. Still a good book and just right for summer reading.


4 out of 5 stars Fun light read   August 12, 2008
Nothing brilliant, but a fun entertaining read. This book is not insulting and blatantly predictable like some chick-lit books. I definitely recommend it if you are in the market for a breezy cute story. The story definitely works.


4 out of 5 stars Cinderalla Story in the World of the Uber Rich   April 3, 2008
  1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Can't get enough of Paris Hilton, Lindsay Lohan, and Nicole Richie? HOW TO TEACH FILTHY RICH GIRLS by Zoey Dean might be the key to your rich girl obsessions. But don't let me mislead you, the book's about Megan. And she's far from rich.

Megan graduated and wanted nothing but the publishing dream--move to New York City, find a job at a prestigious publishing company or magazine, and live her dream. What happened was a crummy job at a tabloid and a huge student load ($75,000 to be exact). And it turns even more sour--she loses her job at the tabloid. Kinda. In the same firing meeting, the editor-in-chief waves Megan a bone: tutor two of the richest heiresses on the Palm Beach, Florida scene so that their SAT scores literally score them a spot at Duke. With little other choice, Megan takes the job and our real story begins.

The twins? Seventeen-year-olds Rose and Sage Baker are known for drunken parties and flashing the paparazzi (sound familiar?) and aren't so keen on this "arrangement." Hell just arranging their social schedule to fit in a little school, isn't on their agenda. Especially when the teacher is a peer who looks like a [gasp!] struggling post-graduate wearing a bunch of thrift store finds. But don't fret, Megan's a fighter. The $1500 a week and the possibility of ridding herself of the school loan debt--has her determined if not plain old, scared to NOT make this plan work.

HOW TO TEACH FILTHY RICH GIRLS was hilarious. Megan had me in stitches. She is sarcastic, fun, witty, and well... like an every day post-grad girl that is so broke the thought of being well dressed and fed is merely a daydream. There's a bit-o-Cinderella in the plot (as in happily ever after; ugly girl turns pretty), but don't let that turn you away. There's more than a few twists that definitely make it giggling fun.



2 out of 5 stars Disappointing.   February 16, 2008
  4 out of 6 found this review helpful

Skip this if you are looking for a chick lit heroine who is actually smart. Megan certainly isn't. No perceptive insights into the world of the fabulously wealthy, no witty asides, no scintillating repartee. Instead, you have author Zoey Dane constantly reminding readers of Megan's magna cum laude dual degree from Yale. I guess she has to, because there is no indication otherwise that Megan has more than average intelligence. Dane's one attempt -Megan's suggestion of an article on the possible link between breast cancer and the pill, is laughable. A) Megan works for a gossip rag. B) Even if Megan hadn't a clue about the subject, a modicum of research would have corrected her. Instead, Megan the journalist offers the article idea after reading a single article on hormone replacement therapy. C) In the one incident of unplanned sex on the beach, there was no mention of condoms, so I was left to conclude that smart Megan was on the pill despite thinking it can cause her breast cancer. By the way, this article proposal of Megan's is called "intelligent and ballsy." *sigh*

Also skip this one if the following plot line makes you grimace: Debra, Megan's editor tells her "you remind me of me at your age" and then sends Megan to Palm Beach, partly thinking Megan was "perfect" for her son.

On the otherhand, go ahead and buy the book if it appeals to you to read that the fabulously rich dine on champagne* and caviar (without the carb loaded crackers) everyday and that with a hair iron, spackling, and couture gowns, a sow's ear can be turned into a silk purse.

The best parts of the book were the multiple choice questions which preface the chapters.

*Champagne is full of carbs. But I guess Zoey Dane doesn't know that.



5 out of 5 stars Great Read   February 7, 2008
Megan Smith lives in NYC and works as a secretary for a fashion magazine doing captions for photos. She would rather be working for a more well respected magazine, but stays put. That is until she gets fired. Her boss tells her that she is is not suited for that kind of job.

Her boss tells her that she has a job lined up for her working in Florida and that it would help her money wise (she has massive college debt). Megan flies down to Florida, not knowing who she was going to work for, but was told to read a magazine with an article in it about the spoiled rotten grandchildren of a French woman who made billions marketing skin and hair care products. The grandchildren (twins) need to be tutored so that they can be accepted into Duke University before they get their inheritance

The twins Rose and Sage do not want to have anything to do with Megan at first, thinking that they will not need Megan since they will be big stars, but that is soon proven wrong. They decide to do the work and in the process all thing learn things about themselves and find love in along the way.



Powered by Associate-O-Matic