Product Details
Tabloid Love: Looking for Mr. Right in All the Wrong Places, A Memoir

Tabloid Love: Looking for Mr. Right in All the Wrong Places, A Memoir
By Bridget Harrison

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Product Description

Dubbed one of the summer's hottest beach reads by People, Glamour, Cosmo, and the Weekend "Today" show, Tabloid Love introduces Bridget Harrison, an almost thirty-year-old Brit and rookie reporter for the New York Post. While her London friends begin to marry, Bridget chases her dream of becoming a hard-news journalist. But just as she perfects the art of interviewing strangers about ghoulish crimes, she discovers that finding a mate seems impossible in the ultimate singles city. Then Bridget lands her very own Post dating column, and half a million New Yorkers read about her weekly romantic disasters. Whether covering celebrity parties in the Hamptons or struggling to hide her inter-office crush, Bridget retains such humor and humility "you'll not only root for her, you'll wish she were your best friend." (Harper's Bazaar)


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #949814 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-06-11
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 400 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Harrison was 29 when she came to the New York Post through an exchange program with a London newspaper. After breaking up with her English boyfriend, her initial four-month stint turned into a permanent position, and soon the metro reporter acquired a Sunday column detailing her dating mishaps—all the while nurturing a crush on one of her editors. The abrupt shifts in tone—Harrison's typical day involves racing from the scene of a child murder to a dinner date with a matchmaker—are jarring but manageable, thanks to Harrison's engaging voice, and the urban newspaper setting is a zippy backdrop for the real-life chick lit drama. It's particularly amusing when Harrison and her crush start dating, and she attempts to write about their relationship in the column by changing his vital information, failing to fool anyone at the Post. However, other scenes drag, and the saga limps on for more than 100 pages after Harrison's interoffice romance grinds to a halt. Harrison's misadventures will inevitably draw comparisons to those of the other Bridget (Jones), but with a little more practice, this young Brit could remove all confusion. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review
"A frank, funny memoir of dating in New York." -- Glamour, July 2006

"Endearing, gossipy and wicked…This book is pure…fun as [Harrison] romps through London, Manhattan, the Hamptons and back." -- BookPage, July 2006

"Funny and honest." -- Newsday, 6/9/06

"Harrison's depictions of her fish-out-of-water hijinks lift this sharp yet tenderhearted memoir above the predictable chick-lit crop." -- Elle.com, July 2006

"Harrison’s memoir is good fun. Readers will be intrigued…and the pages keep turning." -- Library Journal, 6/1/06

"[Compared] to Bridget Jones or Sex in the City... Harrison is something altogether different... Lovely." -- PopGurls.com

"[Harrison] maintains a sense of humor that renders her deeply likable." -- People, 6/12/06

Alternately funny and poignant, [Harrison's] tale of matchups gone terribly wrong reads like fiction... The season's must-have beach accessory. -- Marie Claire June, 2006

Hilarious...Forget Sex in the City reruns. With her savvy single girl insight Harrison might just be the new Carrie Bradshaw. -- Cosmopolitan June, 2006

Hot Beach Read: Move over, Bridget Jones! You, too, Carrie Bradshaw! Make room for Bridget Harrison. -- Star 5/29/06

About the Author
Columnist Bridget Harrison has written for the New York Post, the London Observer, and the Times and Sunday Times of London. She lives in New York City and London.


Customer Reviews

A raunchier real-life Mary Tyler Moore opens her kimono5
Harrison revives the plucky insouciance of love-challenged journalist MTM throwing her hat in the air in the opening credits of the '70's best TV sitcom -- although Bridget's hat would be drenched in the alcohol and tobacco smoke that, with her Rhoda-type gal pals, were her constant companions. Updating MTM, too, Bridget takes us into bedrooms and hotel rooms for her occasional besotted zipless one-nighters, and -- far cry from Mary dating Lou Grant! -- much of her story focuses on Harrison's pining for, bedding, and then splitting with her immediate boss at the Post. Bridget, too, shares MTM's cheerful let-it-all-out approach to life in sharing her romantic frustrations with the world via the NY Post dating column she wrote for two years. In the best breezy tabloid style, the chapters are short and punchy, and left me wanting so much more.

Brilliant!4
In her blurb for Tabloid Love, newswoman Linda Ellerbee writes, "You don't have to be twenty-nine to enjoy this story. You only have to remember what it was like and that you were once young enough to think twenty-nine was old." I'm well past twenty-nine, and chick lit isn't my normal read, but I loved Tabloid Love and Bridget Harrison! I wasn't familiar with Ms. Harrison's NY Post column, and I was delightfully surprised. Like other reviewers, I spent a beautiful late summer day indoors and neglected housekeeping because I couldn't wait to read what happened next to our real life Bridget Jones.

As a wordsmith, I appreciated the insider's view of the "glamorous" life of a news reporter--standing on a subway platform on a steamy summer day just to get a photo of a thermometer reading 100 degrees was one of my favorites. On the flip side, her tales of her summer covering social events in the Hamptons are hilarious; anyone with aspirations of life among the glitterati might think twice after seeing things through Ms. Harrison's eyes.

Hopefully readers who think the grass is greener will have a greater appreciation of their lives and loves once they realize that life as a sexy single in the big city isn't all it's cracked up to be. Overall, a great, fun, fairytale of a read where our heroine lands on her feet. Hopefully, we'll learn that there's a happily ever after in her follow-up book.


LOVED this book...the perfect escape!5
Subtitled "Looking for Mr. Right in all the wrong places," I missed the fact, at first, that this is A MEMOIR -- real-life! -- and that makes all the difference. TABLOID LOVE reads like fiction, and comes dangerously close to oh-so-familiar territory in the first pages, with a thirtysomething, single English girl journaling thoughts on career, love and marriage, with cute abbreviations ("...need to be thinking about babies v.v. soon...") and an obsessive focus on finding The One. Very Bridget Jones.

However, TABLOID LOVE is saved from the same old syrupy, chick lit formula by:
1) A really good Prologue; 2) A true-to-life story (not all perfect endings & happily-ever-after); and 3) Harrison, fortunately, quickly moves off the relationship focus and on to her adventures as a tabloid news reporter for The New York Post, on an exchange program from London. Oh, and 4) Harrison is funny, smart -- very much a Rebel -- and one heck of a writer!

TABLOID LOVE is readable, and highly enjoyable as a behind-the-scenes glimpse into tabloid journalism and living single in New York -- what an alternate reality!

Best-selling author Candace Bushnell sums up TABLOID LOVE on a cover blurb:
"A real-life Bridget Jones meets Sex in the City."

Candace Bushnell is the author of Sex in the City, as well as a number of other books, including Lipstick Jungle, published in 2005 (good -- not nearly as great!). I would have to go further, having read all of Bushnell's books (and having been a big fan of the HBO series), that TABLOID LOVE is better (gasp!), because it is more gritty, more realistic, more true-to-life -- and knowing that, Harrison's adventures as a London journalist on exchange, working in New York; as a talented writer with her own dating column; and then spending a summer reporting on celebrities and life in the Hamptons; not to mention her clear-headed, stark account of 9/11 in New York -- a Day in The Life as it happened all around her -- TABLOID LOVE is better than fiction!

I LOVED this book! Take it with you, and enjoy it as the perfect summer beach read. If you can't get away, go hide in the bathroom for an escape -- remember to lock the door!

-- Sherri Caldwell, Co-Author: The Rebel Housewife Rules (Conari Press, 2004)
Humor Columnist & Reviewer at [...]