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Babyface (Red Dress Ink)

For Nina, the path from singlehood to motherhood was easy. It's knowing what to do once she arrived that was the problem. When Nina met Jonathan through the personals, she thought he seemed nice... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

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Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Oh Baby

Thrown into motherhood without a plan or a clue, Nina tries to navigate her relationship with the father, decide if she wants to go back to work, decide who her friends are, and most importantly, discover herself. The book has an overall melancholy tone, which I felt was true to the character and simply helped me understand her more. I felt that the depictions of new motherhood were accurate. If you have kids, you know that you're clueless in the beginning and that it takes months to come out of the fog and realize how much you love your baby and that you are still a human being with personal needs. There are parts that are quite funny in a dry way. I found this to be a good read and a solid chick lit title.

fine chick lit motherhood tale

In London reporter Nina met Jonathan through a lonely-hearts advertisement. They seemed to get on quite nicely together, but neither expected Nina to become pregnant. Still the pair goes ahead with having the child they name Ben.However, Nina finds motherhood boring with no awards though she is proud of her baby's accomplishments. She wants to go back to reporting or just an occasional escape from her little Ben sentence that she is serving. Her opportunity arises when her fashion editor asks to use Ben as a model for a photo shoot. As Ben's career explodes and he becomes a baby star, Nina realizes she should clue Jonathan in with what she has done, but there never seems to be the right time to do so.BABYFACE is a fine look at motherhood starring an individual who loves and wants the best for her infant, but also misses the action and glamour of her journalistic work as she only remembers the good times at the job. Nina hides Ben's profession too long because there is a basic trust issue here plus the don't tell stretches too long. Yet fans will forgive her indiscretion because she represents many new mothers who want their cake and eat it too (why else have the cake in the first place - for the clueless Jonathans to eat it?). Fiona Gibson furbishes a fine chick lit motherhood tale (that is going around a lot lately).Harriet Klausner
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