HELP WANTED DESPERATELY
Author: Ariel Horn ISBN: 0060589582 9/2004 CHICK LIT Publisher: AVON TRADE
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Seven months, three weeks, two days -- that's exactly how long Alexa has to establish herself in an exciting career. At twenty-one, she's determined to gallop into "the Real World with a Real Job, a Real Life, and a Real Future." Moving in with her parents and commuting from New Jersey into Manhattan is not an option -- and if she fails to find serious employment before the time runs out, it's off to teach English on the Third World island of Majuro for $100 a month!
But what jobs are available for an inexperienced young woman in the Big City? Writing headlines about yeast infections for Trend magazine? Sniffing deodorants for a living? Earthworm breeder? Phone sex operator?
The Real World, apparently, is not such a welcoming place. With employment opportunities growing increasingly fewer and more bizarre daily, should Alexa consider seeking some stability by moving in with her boyfriend Jared? Between her participation in a clinical sleep study for cash and her desperate attempts to become the voice of a cartoon cat in a last ditch effort to gain "respectful employment," Alexa hardly knows anymore. Maybe what she's really looking for is in the last place she ever thought she'd find it ...
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RRAH's THOUGHTS AND PONDERINGS:
HELP WANTED, DESPERATELY details Alexa's search for a "real job" during her senior year in college. From being the voice of a cat to breeding earthworms, Alexa frantically searches for THE perfect job with, as you can guess, all kinds of outlandish results. By signing up to teach English in the Marshall Islands, she's imposed a deadline of June in finding that job. It's that or face the friends and family with the stigma of "failed in life" stamped across her face.
Ms. Horn, in her debut work, shows promising style and mood in her work, but I didn't like Alexa. I tried, but I could never warm up to her. Alexa seems so silly and at times plain out childish that I couldn't enjoy it. I found myself cringing
as the next episode evolved and thought, 'No!, she's not actually doing this!' I usually enjoy reading a farce, but this is overplayed and absurd. I hope that in her next work, Ms. Horn tones down the ridiculous and writes a witty story with the
same energy but different characters.
Kendra Patterson
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