The Queen Gene by Jennifer Coburn

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: February 2007
  • 320pp
  • Sales Rank: 423,796
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: February 2007
    • Publisher: Kensington Publishing Corporation
    • Format: Paperback, 320pp
    • Sales Rank: 423,796

    Synopsis

    If It’s Not One Thing, It’s Your Mother. "You are so lucky to have a mother like Anjoli." -- That’s what all my friends say. But really, my friends weren’t there when I was eight and my theatre-savvy, drama queen of a mother said she didn’t want to take me to the Central Park Zoo because the animals didn’t put on a good show. My mother is like a vapor: when she enters a room, she occupies every bit of space. Don’t get me wrong -- I adore my mom...from a distance. It’s just, well, what can you say about a woman who takes her teacup Chihuahua to every new age healer in Manhattan, who has a living-beauty will so her eyebrows will still look great if she’s in a coma, and who tells my cousin Kimmy that the sperm bank has too many rules and suggests a new lipstick and a train ride to Princeton instead?

    To top it off, she calls me ten times a day to say, "Darling, I’m in crisis!" What, like I’m not? In addition to mothering my mother, I’m also trying to keep my marriage hot with a two-year-old under foot -- babysitting the artists in residence at my Berkshires artists’ colony, which seems to be the Bermuda Triangle of creativity but a breeding ground for seriously insane -- resisting an attraction to a man so sexy he could give your eyeballs an orgasm -- and trying to rid my 100-year-old home of mischievous ghosts. Yeah, sort of got my hands full. The way I see it, I’ve got two choices: go completely mad, or start living my own life on my own terms, starting with my mother. I’m just not sure which option is crazier...

    Customer Reviews

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    • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

    fun chick lit sequelby harstan

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    December 31, 2006: Everyone loves Anjoli from the moment they meet her as she is bigger than life taking over any space she and people nearby occupy. Growing up her daughter Lucy was the envy of her friends having the hip Anjoli as a mother, but even as a kid though she loves her mom, she knew from first hand experience don?t live with Anjoli as she sucks out the oxygen in a room, change that on all of Manhattan Island. Even the woman?s living will has a key entry involving eyelash care. Meanwhile Lucy and her spouse Jack open up an artists? colony in the Berkshires while raising their two years old son distance and motherhood have improved Lucy?s relationship with Anjoli though mom calls a zillion times a day with one crisis after another, mostly involving her adopted orphan, Paz the teacup Chihuahua, who needs a shrink after visiting every new age healer in the metropolis and a few neo new age practitioners. Still Lucy has problems with her terrible two toddler and ghosts causing injuries to her colonists. She needs the Ghostbusters to exorcize the ?demon? that possesses her used to be cute infant. With Anjoli arriving at the retreat, impish ghosts, temperamental artists, a temper-tantrum baby, a kooky cousin, the stoic puppy and a stunned in the headlights spouse seem harmonious. --- THE QUEEN GENE is a chick lit sequel that lightly satirizes the previous story (see TALES FROM THE CRIB). Though Lucy is the hub holding the spokes of the novel together, Anjoli steals the show with her offbeat neurotic behavior that will have readers wondering just who the mom is in this mother-daughter relationship. By making Anjoli the drama queen the star instead of her offspring, who confronts issues, Jennifer Coburn provides a more humorous spin to the saga of we love Lucy. --- Harriet Klausner