Perfectly Plum: An Unauthorized Celebration of the Life,...
by Sylvia Day, Amy Garvey, Donna Kauffman, Brenda Scott Royce, Keris Stainton
BenBella Books
June 1, 2007
ISBN #1933771046
240 pages
Trade Size
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Other Books by
Sylvia Day

Ask For It

Don't Tempt Me

Heat of the Night

A Passion for Him

Magic and Mayhem

Perfect Kisses

Passion for the Game

Pleasures of the Night

Got a Minute?: Sixty Second Erotica

Alluring Tales: Awaken the Fantasy

The Stranger I Married

Declassified: Dark Kisses

White Hot Holidays, Volume 2

Ask For It

Ellora's Cavemen: Dreams of the Oasis, Volume II

Ellora's Cavemen: Dreams of the Oasis, Volume II

Bad Boys Ahoy!

Wish List

Kiss of the Night

Snaring The Huntress

Misled

Sex on Holiday

Catching Caroline

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Summary

Perfectly Plum: An Unauthorized Celebration of the Life, Loves and Other Disasters of Stephanie Plum, Trenton Bounty Hunter by Leah Wilson (Editor) and contributors Sylvia Day, Amy Garvey, Brenda Scott Royce, Donna Kauffman, Keris Stainton, Kyra Davis, Shanna Swendson and more...

** COMPLETELY UNAUTHORIZED **

Speculating about the cultural metaphors in Janet Evanovich's wildly popular mystery series (which includes 11 books, from One for the Money to Eleven on Top), this anthology takes a look at lingerie-buyer-turned-bounty-hunter Stephanie Plum and catalogs her bad luck with cars (she's blown up quite a few), her good luck with men, her unorthodox approach to weapon storage, and the rich tapestry of her milieu: Trenton, New Jersey, also known as The Burg. The contributors praise the way the series smartly spoofs that familiar chick-lit epiphany—I have a bad job and what I really want is a good man!—in "Bounty Hunting as a Metaphor for Dating," "Why Stephanie Should Quit Her Job . . . but Never Will," and "Nothing Better than a Bad Boy Gone Good." Several essays veer from the chick-lit perspective and focus instead on the comic theme of luck and chance that ties Stephanie to the barroom gamblers and gangster meanies of her home town in "Luck of the Italian?: Skill Versus Chance."

Sylvia Day's essay — Learning to Fly: Why Bounty Hunting Is More Therapeutic Than Running Over Morelli With A Buick



 

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