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The Manny | 
| Manufacturer: The Dial Press Category: EBooks
List Price: $19.95 Buy New: $9.60 You Save: $10.35 (52%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 43 reviews Sales Rank: 12981
Format: Kindle Book Media: Kindle Edition Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 368
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 ASIN: B000SCHBAW
Publication Date: June 19, 2007 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Amazon.com Guest Reviewer: Plum Sykes Plum Sykes burst onto bookshelves in 2004 with her internationally-acclaimed bestseller Bergdorf Blondes, a novel in which she spotlighted the lives of New York's Park Avenue Princesses. Born in London and educated at Oxford, Sykes is a contributing editor at Vogue, where she writes on fashion, society, and Hollywood. She has also written for Vanity Fair magazine. Her latest novel is The Debutante Divorcee.
"If you want to see rich people act really rich, go to St. Henry's School for Boys at 3p.m. on any weekday." Or you could just read Holly Peterson's debut novel, The Manny. The first line of this rather delicious story sets us up for what is to come: a satire of money, marriage, men and mannys. ("The Manny" of the title is actually a male nanny, just another parenting trend for Manhattan's uber-rich.) Peterson's heroine is Jamie Whitfield, a middle class girl from middle America who, supposedly, married well. She works as a news producer and it is through her that we get an inside peek at Manhattan's silly rich. In Peterson's well-drawn world, Whitfield and her hotshot lawyer husband, Philip, inhabit a specific area of Manhattan's Upper East Side, dubbed `The Grid'. Although Jamie fell hard for Philip when they were in their twenties, little did she realize she was marrying a man who thinks making a million or so a year means he is poverty-stricken, whose personal vanity knows know bounds and whose preferred reading material is books with titles like How To Raise Children in an Affluent Environment. With the ghastly husband getting more revolting by the second, her son Dylan losing his confidence, and Jamie's work going wrong, it's not long before Peter Bailey, a thirty year old manny--who also happens to be outrageously sexy--enters the fray. Now, there is nothing more amusing than the posh girl falling for The Help, but upright Jamie holds out--for pages and pages and pages--determined not to cheat on her husband. But when Jamie discovers another Alpha Mom has seduced Peter in her linen closet during a play date, it seems only a matter of time before the inevitable happens. Peterson has a keen eye for the zeitgeist. She describes the world of the hedge-fund billionaires and their excessive desires with sharp precision and a steely honesty. She takes us to their children's lavish birthday parties, explores the exact kind of fringing their cushions require and even kindly translates their slang for us: "its wheels up at three" actually means "my private plane takes off at three o'clock". Though the detail of such an extreme lifestyle could become suffocating, at its heart the book has a more human crisis to explore--a marriage in jeopardy. The fun comes with the love affair with the Manny. It's Lady Chatterly's Lover for the beach.
Product Description What’s a Park Avenue working mom to do when her troubled son desperately needs a male role model and her husband is a power workaholic? If she’s like the gutsy heroine of Holly Peterson’s astute new comedy of manners among the ill-mannered elite, she does what every other woman on the block does. She hires herself a “manny.”
A solid middle-class girl from Middle America, Jamie Whitfield isn’t “one of them” but she lives in “the Grid,” the wealthiest acre of real estate in Manhattan, where big money and big media collide. And she has most everything they have–a big new apartment, full-time help with her three children, as well as her very own detached Master of the Universe attorney husband. What she doesn’t have, however, is a full-time father figure for their struggling nine-year-old son, Dylan. But the rich haven’t yet encountered a problem they can’t hire someone else to solve.
Enter the manny.
At first the idea of paying a man to provide a role model for Dylan sounds too crazy to be true. But one look at Peter Bailey is enough to convince Jamie that the idea may not be quite so insane after all. Peter is calm, cool, competent, and so charmingly down-to-earth, he’s irresistible. And with the political sex scandal of the decade propelling her career as a news producer into overdrive, and her increasingly erratic husband locked in his study with suspicious files, Jamie is in serious need of some grounding.
Peter reminds her of everything she once was, still misses, and underneath all the high-society glitz, still is. But will the new manny in her life put the ground back beneath her feet, or sweep her off them?
From the Hardcover edition.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 38 more reviews...
Please save your money July 3, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Don't know much I can add to what people have already said, but I love chick lit and can enjoy almost any book, but I found this book painful to finish. The writing wasn't great, the characters were cardboard, and the story was so drawn out. It was a cute idea, but it wasn't well executed. So please just trust me and save your money. This book and Trading Up by Candace Bushnell are the only two chick lit books I have ever not enjoyed.
How many copycat Nanny Diaries can there be? June 26, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
It was only a matter of time. Once The Nanny Diaries by Emma McLaughlin came out, and Bridget Jones's Diary by Helen Fielding became popular, chick lit was in full swing. It was only natural that The Manny by Holly Peterson would be written. For those who enjoyed the shoes in Beth Harbison's Shoe Addicts Anonymous, or designer clothes in Lauren Weisberger's The Devil Wears Prada, one might enjoy this VERY light beach read. Although it is a somewhat weaker copycat, it might bring a smile or two to moms who find the summer months their biggest dread as schools close! Jamie Whitfield is a part-time working mother of three children ranging from two to nine years old. Her job as a busy news producer as well as being part of the Manhattan Mom's scene, with a successful attorney husband who is absent a great deal and let's just say, not a "hands-on helper", has Jamie at the end of her rope. Jamie, who is a transplanted Midwesterner, finds the adjustment to the New York scene a constant battle. With her eldest, nine-year-old Dylan, showing more and more signs of withdrawal to the point of being motionless at times, Jamie thinks a male role model would do him some good. Husband Phillip, concerned with supporting his family in the style he thinks they need and are accustomed to where his income of more than a million dollars annually just gets them by, CERTAINLY can't give up his time to sit with Dylan and see what makes him tick. As a workaholic himself, Phillip can't imagine someone, especially his own son, having problems that would result in anything not productive. Phillip does give us a glimpse of the man Jamie fell in love with and who deep down loves his children every once in a while, but the times are too few and far between. It is at this point, as things with Dylan get worse, that Jamie decides that a male role model, rather than a nanny, would be the answer. So she seeks out a "manny". Being in this class of privileged people where buying something can surely solve anyone's problems, Jamie is optimistic that finding the right manny will solve her problems. And so, we meet Peter Bailey. He is 29 years old and looking for funding for his software business. Peter seems to like children and is kind and very intelligent. It also doesn't hurt that he is very good looking! The fact that Peter is attentive to Jamie as well as he appreciates and respects her, are all things in Peter's favor. So, Jamie hires Peter and the "nanny of the male persuasion" starts his job! One doesn't have to be a genius to anticipate that Jamie and Peter will become attracted to each other. That along with subplots concerning Jamie's hot news report she is working on involving an affair of a prominent congressman, and the way the rich are living their superficial lives, moves the story line along as would be expected. Some complications can only help add to the rather predictable plot. The story of course is fictional and rather cliche as it talks about how people in these situations can get into trouble when letting the wrong priorities take over their lives. So will the manny be Jamie's answer to not only Dylan, but also her unfulfilling marriage? Will we find that Jamie can find happiness with a real man whether he has money or not? That is something you do have to read to find out about!
How can you NOT like this book? June 12, 2008 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
For fun summer read, check out the Manny. I loved Peterson's writing. She lured me into the story and made Jaime's character very real and practical. My best read of the summer so far!
Not that bad June 8, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
I just finished reading "The Manny" as part of my Summer 2008 reading and I liked it. I think that it's definitely appropriate for to be cast in the light, Summer, beach read category. I didn't think the storyline was that bad, Mannies are something that I haven't read before. I sided with Jamie, the main character, in the situations that she was in and she was like-able to me. Her husband got on my nerves but I think he was supposed to. Also I was satisfied with how the book ended. The book did have a bit of a chick-lit formula but that's what to be expected when reading a chick-lit novel.
I didn't have any big problems with the storyline or the book. But I do have to say that the author made Peter, the manny, seem to perfect. Like he didn't have any flaws. Nobody can be that perfect. Also Jamie didn't really seem to spend that much time with her two younger kids. Most of time that wasn't spent at work, was worrying and spending time with her older son, Dylan.
But I really didn't think the book was horrible. It kept me interested-I never got bored reading it. I would recommend this book to people who like Plum Sykes and books about the Manhattan elite. It's definitely a great book for Summer reading.
Loved it June 6, 2008 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
I would like to see the readers who complain about poor writing style try and write their own book. I loved this book--it is light-hearted, funny, and endearing. Its a modern day tale of a seemingly common phenomenon. The book does not try and come off as a classic or a novel of high sophistiction. It's chic lit, and if that's not what you want, then dont read it. The author does seem to be a bit pretentious, but give her a break.
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