Not impressed. It seemed to advertise itself and was advertised by readers who favored it as a morality tale of sorts, the female protagonist's tragic story of a downward spiral into drugs, depression, despair, and death. All of that really just occupies maybe the last 30 pages, and at that point, yes, it's pretty effectively tragic. Leading up, however, her addiction and self-destruction are only occasionally alluded to. Otherwise, it felt like Helen Fielding's "Cause Celeb": an insider's view of an aspect of show business that's so busy showing you how much the author knows about such a thing that it forgets to tell the story. I did like the parts that talked about the main character's background and upbringing in Springfield and around Table Rock Lake down in Branson, Missouri, especially in that Barnhardt didn't seem to have been raised around here or have any interest in this part of the country except insofar as giving his character a midwestern background. And yet he gets it right. His research is thorough and she is an authentic product of the region. This was the one aspect of her character that really drew me in, but that's only because I know southwestern Missouri and can verify Barnhardt's research. It would be prejudicial for me to award more stars just on that basis rather than having a more cohesive and purposeful story.