dot.homme is a very lively, incident-packed, 450-odd pages, and it&’,s a cogent demonstration that Jane Moore is a writer of imagination and skill &–, as her earlier Fourplay (pun intended) showed. The comparisons that have been drawn with Sex and the City&’,s Candace Busnell are right on the...
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dot.homme is a very lively, incident-packed, 450-odd pages, and it&’,s a cogent demonstration that Jane Moore is a writer of imagination and skill &–, as her earlier Fourplay (pun intended) showed. The comparisons that have been drawn with Sex and the City&’,s Candace Busnell are right on the button: this is a funny, sympathetic picture of the choices (in both the sexual and romantic arena) facing a young woman today. In her mid-thirties, Jess Monroe is at ease with her single sta
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