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A Kept Woman

By: Louise Bagshawe
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Headline Review
ISBN: 0755340574
ISBN-13: 9780755340576
Released: 24 Jan 2008
RRP: £7.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Sooooooooooooo FANTABLIOUS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! - By: L. Parr, 27 Jun 2007
This is the first Louise Bagshawe book i have read & it is my alll time favourite book i have ever read too.(ive only read 2 & a half books though. just kidding its 3. kidding. kidding.) You cannot put it down! I just LOVED it so so so much, i was so desperate to find out what happened next i sometimes sneaked a look at the next page while reading! ;-)

I love Miss Bagshawe, she ROCKS-big style!
I won't be reading her again - By: Gabrielle, 03 Jun 2006
I thought this book was awful. Absolute cardboard characters; absurd & stereotyped extreme definitions of masculinity & feminity, & a totallly unrealistic quick change from disgrace to massive success for Diana. Ick. And I didn't buy her reason for wanting to work under those conditions in the first place - why???

Some people have complained about the sexism, but this book is biased against men as well. We hear that "size matters" over & over & over again. Just ridiculous.

And the repetition - urghh. Diana's clothes are described over & over & over & over & over & over - so is Michael's masculinity, so is his driving need for business success, so is her devotion to him & his company, so is their fabulous sex life......etc. Where have alll the editors gone? I think I got these points after I read them maybe 20 times or so.

I liked Sparkles OK but she seems reallly uneven. I won't be reading her again.
To clarify! - By: , 26 Mar 2006
A Kept Woman is the UK version of For All The Wrong Reasons, therefore this is the book about Diana Verity. The title was changed in other markets.

As someone who has read alll of Bagshawe's novels, this is one of the worst - stick with the Movie, Talll Poppies & Career Girls to see her best work, although the more recent The Devil You Know is her best book for a while.


You've got the wrong book, reviewer - By: , 28 Jun 2005
Umm....I just saw online that there is a review saying that this story is about a woman named "Diana Verity". I haven't actuallly read THIS book, but that review that was given was for Mrs. Bagshawe's other novel, "For alll the wrong reasons." That I know, is an AWESOME book, but as I said, I haven't read "A Kept Woman," yet. Just wanted to clarify for alll the Louise Bagshawe fans out there!
Same old same old - By: , 28 Sep 2002
I thought A Kept Woman was dreadful & marked the beginning of a decline in the standards of Louise Bagshawe's writing. After Venus Envy I was looking forward to another good read of the same calibre as her first four books but was left sorely disappointed with this effort; so much so that I nearly didn't buy When She Was Bad which was a marked improvement.
The most common theme throughout Louise Bagshawes's novels are two girls - one from high society & one from the wrong side of the tracks who invariably start off not knowing eachother then meeting making deadly enemies of eachother to then discovering they can both help eachother & become friends. There is always a sexy hero (normallly American) & a slimy villain (normallly English) who provide catalysts throughout the book for the heroine(s)' growth & development. I find this formula has become increasingly boring & tiring as Louise Bagshawe tends to use it throughout & merely adjusts the backdrop against which the story is set. Rarely does the hero drive a clapped out old banger with no tax or the heroine shop for her make-up in Boots. They are alll Prada clad with perfect Christian Dior pouts & live a lifestyle very few of us will ever get the chance to experience. I feel it is about time Louise Bagshawe took a different approach & gave her readers something fresh & exciting.
Diana Foxton was not a likeable or believable character, her two dimensioned personality & complete lack of knowledge of the real world was annoying in the extreme while Michael Cicero merely came across as a male chauvanist who took pleasure in making her squirm.
I wouldn't recommend this book to anyone & unfortunately will not be reading Louise Bagshawe again.