Life at the top of the A-list is fabulous, but itβs a long way to the ground if you fallβand the cameras are always waiting to publicly humiliate you if you do. Jessica, Mary Anne, Lydia, and Celeste have stayed at the top by sticking together. The last time they collaborated on a project, the film
Secrets of the Hollywood Girls Club
β Scribed by Marr, Maggie
- Book ID
- 109159478
- Publisher
- Crown
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 166 KB
- Series
- Hollywood Girls Club 2
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The ripsnorter sequel to Hollywood Girls Club revolves around sex and plastic surgery secrets that, if revealed, would destroy movie queen Celeste Cici Solange and likely sink movie studios and destroy high-power industry marriages. If that sounds like fun, it is. Our world, our business, has nothing to do with substance or reality, lectures Kiki Dee, the bad-ass publicist who collects stars' secrets like Donald Trump amasses real estate. But superficial doesn't come cheap in Hollywood, where A-lister Cici covertly goes under the knife knowing her public expected her to personify youth and to age gracefully and that aging gracefully meant aging very little at all. The surfacing of Cici's other secretβa sex tape made by her exβsets off a madcap plan to get it back before it hits big on the internet or her husband (and Worldwide Pictures honcho) Ted Robinoff finds out that it exists. Along the way, screenwriter Mary Anne Meyers rises to celebrity on the arm of screen idol Holden Humphrey; Jessica Caufield transitions from agent to big-time manager-producer-wife-and-mom; and production chief Lydia Albright's uncertain about her future. Marr's prose is fast and sharp, and she keeps the plots flying.
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"Romance, sex... [Marr] clearly knows her way around Hollywood. Saucy... bound to be compared to certain Jackie Collins titles not just because of the Hollywood subject matter but also because Marr brings a similar ferocious energy to her writing." \--Boston Globe "Marr's titillating debut... M