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Life Skills

Life Skills

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Author: Katie Fforde
Publisher: Arrow Books Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £6.99
Buy Used: £0.01
You Save: £6.98 (100%)



New (20) Used (48) from £0.01

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 10 reviews
Sales Rank: 5726

Media: Paperback
Edition: New edition
Pages: 352
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.2 x 1.3

ISBN: 009928023X
EAN: 9780099280231
ASIN: 009928023X

Publication Date: May 4, 2000
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Tanning pages. A few marks to cover.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Life Skills
  • Paperback - Life Skills
  • Mass Market Paperback - Life Skills
  • Hardcover - Life Skills (Charnwood Library)
  • Hardcover - Life Skills
  • Audio Cassette - Life Skills
  • Paperback - Life Skills
  • Paperback - Life Skills

Similar Items:

  • The Rose Revived
  • Artistic Licence
  • Living Dangerously
  • Wild Designs
  • Highland Fling

Customer Reviews:   Read 5 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars Low on realism and excitement, high on predictability   December 6, 2007
ryan hurney
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

If you're reading a lightweight `30-something woman doesn't know where she's going in life' novel, you generally know what to expect. The plots are usually predictable, and not what keeps you interested; it's how the author and the characters get to the inevitable ending that counts. Judy Astley is a great example of an author who knows how to turn a predictable plot into a charming read through strong characterisation and sharp dialogue. On the evidence of Life Skills, Katie Fforde isn't. From the first page the reader can see what will happen on the last, and none of the characters or situations are interesting enough to make you care what happens in between. Realism also appears to be sadly absent from the book too. Lead character Julia begins the book as a country estate agent - yet cannot drive. A recurring theme is the truth behind why Julia was sacked, but the real mystery seems to be how she got the job in the first place. Unfortunately by the time everything is tied up in a neat little package in the end, one crucial element to any novel - the reader's interest - has long since evaporated.


3 out of 5 stars Could have been funny but didn't quite make it   May 23, 2005
Wicked Woman (Cheshire)
3 out of 5 found this review helpful

Oh dear! If only the characters had been believable this could have been such a lovely story.

Katie, the central female character, decides to chuck in her job and ditch her fiancée to go in search of pastures new. Looking for a complete change she applies for and gets the position of cook onboard a hotel canal boat.

Running the boat is a poor little rich girl called Suzy who really doesn't know her windlass from her gunwales. Together the two girls somehow manage to make a go of the business and everything's pretty much hunky dory.

The problem is, this is supposed to be funny but isn't. There are a few scenes that could have been hilarious if they'd been better written but most were very clichéd - I felt I'd read them before and not only once, either.

Katie, once a high-flying estate agent somehow knew enough about cooking to cater for 8 people to hotel standing and yet she cannot drive. How often do you come across an estate agent that doesn't drive? Very odd!

I've no idea what drives Oscar, the ex, to keep coming back for me and as for Fergus, a man who Julia seems to despise for no good reason, how he puts up with our so-called heroine is nothing short of a mystery to me. The poor guy must be a glutton for punishment, that's all I can say.

This is a light-hearted read that you'll easily finish in a day or two so is suitable for travelling or beach literature. Just don't expect it to be a laugh-a-minute and remember that the characters are as fictional as they can get.


3 out of 5 stars definitely not one of her best   November 25, 2002
Joanna
12 out of 15 found this review helpful

This book follows the usual Katie ground of (normally thirty something) heroine having a life change for one reason or the other and breaking new ground and like all her books is a pleasant read but, and this is a big but, there is one major problem in this book for me - that Julia's life change to working on the canal boat is prompted by a male junior being promoted over her and given charge of the department she's created, which is just about as open and shut a case of blatent sexual discrimination as you can get. So instead of flouncing out and handing in her resignation why doesn't she threaten to sue her boss? As it stands it just wasn't credible, even if she was unloading an unwanted fiance at the same time. Also not credible is her not being able to drive when she works for a country estate agent - it's an essential requirement for the job and it honestly isn't likely thaat she'd be relying on taxis. otherwise this was a pleasant enough read, though i did find Julia generally a bit irritating and wondered why Fergus put up with her. Living Dangerously and Wild Designs are still Katie's best - if you haven't read them yet, do it now.


5 out of 5 stars Great Introduction to Katie Fforde   April 11, 2002
Eileen O'Brien (Amherst, NH, USA)
7 out of 9 found this review helpful

Picked this book up in a Wal-Mart in Northwest Michigan, of all places, not knowing it was Brit chick fiction, as I call it. I was immediately captivated, and stayed up all night to finish it! "Life Skills" made me want to be on the boat with Julia, maneuvering the canals and putting up with the weirdo guests. The author writes so well, I found myself seriously wishing the tale would never end. I'm hooked on Katie's fiction now! My latest trip to London in February 2002, I bought all her paperbacks! Sadly, I breezed through them like a hot knife through butter and am anxiously awaiting her next. This little gem, though, was a splendid introduction to Katie Fforde's seemingly effortless writing. Lots of fun!


5 out of 5 stars Not the best Fforde, but still 5 stars   March 17, 2001
2 out of 4 found this review helpful

Katie Fforde turns a great tale - there's not a bad book in her bunch. However, Julia isn't as loveable as Fforde's other heriones. And that's OK, I suppose. You do wonder why Fergus persists to the end, how he could see the good that was buried under the surliness. While I didn't click as much with Julia as I have with other Fforde characters, I simply loved Fergus and once again the cast of supporting characters is a riot. And the whole idea of canal boats is so interesting to me as an American - sounds like to fun! Nobody turns a tale like Katie Fforde - be sure to check out her other books, especially Wild Designs and Living Dangerously. I can hardly wait for May 2001, another one is on the way!

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