Prior to her retirement, for eight years Samantha Waters was a high-end call girl who catered to some of the most affluent men in the Bay area of California. Her clients included CEOs, movie stars, professional athletes, and executives from the explosive Dot.com generation. She spent evenings and weekends with men of discriminating taste, men who wished the company of a beautiful and classy woman. In The Dot.com Call Girl you will read about some of the more memorable men she entertained, how the Internet has changed the escort business, and where Samantha believes this ancient profession is headed in the years to come. The Dot.com Call Girl was a finalist in McKenna Publishing Group's annual nonfiction contest before being published in February, 2008.
Not only does the main character constantly premium name-drop, she's a bit of a self-inflated bitch. This is not a girl I would enjoy going out to drinks with, nor would I even want to borrow her clothes as she seems more interested in how her fake breasts look in them than whether they're classy.
Now, that's a lot of vitriol for a book I read all the way through. I did find her stories fascinating. Samantha ran into a lot of crazies and law enforcement without coming out any the worse for wear. Her punchlines to the brief episodes sometimes seemed a little too pat but were, overall, clever.
The reason I rated this so low for an otherwise acceptable book is that the editors were terrible, and missed many punctuation and spelling errors - which is a huge pet peeve of mine. Seriously guys, the author and their editor should be able to spell "winner" - I mean, "winer" isn't really even a word, k? Your spell check software can see that one!