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....................Bubble's Toil and Trouble............................
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When I first discovered that this book was about a dumb-blonde hairdresser named Bubbles Yablonsky who always wears tight tubetops and short skirts, I was afraid it was going to be a stereotypical lamed-brained, pretty airhead says silly things kind of story--I was wrong. Bubbles Yablonsky turned out not to be a stereotype, at least not to the extent I originally feared. I found myself liking her. She has character. She IS a character. She is not the sharpest sheers in the shop academically, but she is spunky, resourceful, and determined single mother, who is trying to improve her lot in life. In her pursuit of happiness, she stumbles into a murder mystery, ends up tangling with the most powerful, upper-class people in town, manages to screw a few things up, but then redeems herself magnificently.
While this funny and generally well-executed first novel isn't up to the early Stephanie Plum novels standards, it shows great promise and is as appropriate for male readers as it is for female--well except for the annoying beauty tips that the author (or her flaxen-haired editor) apparently thought were cute fillers.