Diary of a Manhattan Call Girl by Tracy Quan

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(Paperback - First Paperback Edition)

  • Pub. Date: April 2003
  • 273pp
  • Sales Rank: 173,773
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 2003
    • Publisher: Random House Inc
    • Format: Paperback, 273pp
    • Sales Rank: 173,773

    Synopsis

    Diary of a Manhattan Call Girl is a wonderfully intelligent, sexually frank, rollicking novel that introduces us to Nancy Chan, a turn-of-the-millennium call girl who lives and works on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. Nancy is full of contradictory desires; she frequently has to choose between making love and making money. On good days, she gets to do both. Surrounded by devoted, wealthy, and powerful johns, some of whom want more than just sex, and caught between two all-consuming call girl friends who complicate her life, Nancy navigates the tricky currents of the world’s oldest profession. With one foot in the bedrooms of her rich and demanding clients and one in the straight world of her unwitting fiancé, who has started to apartment-hunt and arrange a wedding, Nancy keeps her two worlds from colliding in her inimitable style.

    Publishers Weekly

    In timely step with stories glorifying characters created for video games, Quan's semi-autobiographical novel takes readers by the hand (and various other appendages) at the tail end of call girl Nancy Chan's career. Chan (whom Quan created for her Salon online column) is a "successful" (read: expensive) prostitute who spends more time listing her favorite clothes, restaurants and cosmetic tips than even Bret Easton Ellis did in American Psycho. In between $400-per-hour quickies at exclusive hotels, Nancy and her happy hooker pals Jasmine and Allison attend sex-industry activist meetings and debate the sinister reappearance of Jack, a former john who now appears to be obsessed with Allison. Nancy whines about this and her deepening relationship with her commitment-minded boyfriend to her shrink, also revealing how she plunged into prostitution as a teen. The novel has neither a substantial plot (Nancy dithering over whether to marry her dream boyfriend and get out of the life) nor sex appeal: Nancy's descriptions of her sensual encounters, be they professional or personal, are about as erotic as a stereo instruction manual ("always do a few extra Kegels afterwards"). Fans of Quan's online column may enjoy the continuation of Nancy's X-rated soap opera, but first-time readers may be put off by her snobbishness. (Aug.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    Tracy Quan lives in New York City. This is her first novel.


    From the Hardcover edition.

    Customer Reviews

    Diary Of A Manhattan Call Girlby Anonymous

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    August 02, 2007: This book is definitely better than its sequel diary of a married call girl, and I found even though the narrative of this story didn't compell me to read on, I wanted to anyway. And this book is very easy to read, so maybe it's just a handy book to have around if you're bored, the sex scenes are quite explicit but not in a crude way which is a nice touch. Not particularly brilliant, but maybe worth a read on a rainy day.

    Diary Of A Manhattan Call Girlby Anonymous

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    June 01, 2004: The title of this book makes you think it will be one of the most exciting books you will ever read. Honestly it was one of the worst books I ever read. It lacks so much I don't even know where to begin. Half the time the reader is simply made to endure endless pages of following the main character around the city getting her hair done, leg waxed, etc. Unfortunately this book does not live up to its title.


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