This totally did not work for me, but I finished it, so two stars for keeping me reading. I've got a chicken and the egg issue with this book because by the time things came to the crisis point and the players all started to be revealed, I found I couldn't keep the characters straight. Was it because the book didn't do a good job at making it clear, or was it because the book simply didn't resonate with me and thus nothing clicked?
There was a lot going on here that I just didn't get. I didn't think Bubbles' mother and friend Genevive were funny. Zeke's parents were horrible. Chrissy Price was horrible. A lot of the men were horrible -- including Stiletto, who really was quite a turd, especially in how he treated Bubbles. He's by turns controlling and manipulative, tacitly encouraging the rumors about him and Esmerelda. Man, I hope Bubbles dumps him. And at the end? WOW.
I also couldn't get a fix on Bubbles. Is she a ditz? Is she a legit reporter? Is she kind? Compassionate? Smart? Caring? Driven? What is she? She seemed kind of bland and nothing about her stood out -- except for the money stuff. The "I put my $19.95 Payless special shoe through the door." It simply wasn't authentic to the speech of people who live on very small, tight budgets, shall we say. (Or not? Okay. Poor. Poverty line. But... is Bubbles poverty line? It's impossible to tell. My hairdressers make easy six figures. So why can't Bubbles? Is she even working as a reporter? If so, what's her salary? If you're going to portray her in this socioeconomic class, these are germane questions... and the expectations that readers who live in this world are going to recognize not only where she shops but her mindset about it, and that mindset is what's missing.)
I just have too many questions that aren't answered, and they are important questions that kept me from wanting to discover those answers.