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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6
EAN num: 9780425221426
ISBN number: 0425221423
Label: Berkley Trade
Manufacturer: Berkley Trade
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 368
Printing Date: June 03, 2008
Publishing house: Berkley Trade
Sale Popularity Level: 518293
Studio: Berkley Trade
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Product Description:
The subsequent big book from the author of The Next Big Thing. Now in paperback!
After shedding over seventy pounds and hiding her nerdy side, Kylie Chase has reinvented herself as a savvy trendsetter. Her classes on How to Be Cool— which promise to transform students from geek to chic—have become Chicago’s hottest ticket.
But things start to unravel when Kylie’s apartment burns downs and she’s forced to move back in with her parents. With a sexy journalist shadowing her every move, Kylie fears her private embarrassment may become public knowledge. The stress is driving Kylie nuts—and the weight she fought so hard to lose is starting to creep back on. But with the help of her best friend Ruby, a confident plus-sized model, Kylie’s starting to learn that appearances aren’t everything. And that morphing from an “ugly duckling” into the queen of cool isn’t all it’s cracked up to be…
User popularity level:

Rated by buyers
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I like believable books about weight problems. Should be a popular topic seeing how obesity is rampant. Anyway, Kylie has a cool name, cool job, and since she got lost weight, her life is perfect, right? Well, not really as we find out here--skinny girls have problems, too!
I liked Kylie's clients a lot--I know people like that. Heck, I might be one! I did think she should have been smarter about the male louse in the book, but then I've been there, done that and still would probably do the same thing, but i digress. . .
If you like chick lit, you'll enjoy this book. It is a good read with likeable characters and a decent plot. Definitely a good distraction!
Rated by buyers
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I'm a huge fan of Johanna Edwards' other chick lit novels Your Big Break and The Next Big Thing. Both were truly original stories with loveable characters. In How to Be Cool, she doesn't let her fans down. She's written yet another great chick lit book that has original ideas, a great story and a loveable main character, Kylie.
Rated by buyers
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Chicago native Kylie Chase has made a living out of being cool. Kylie used to be overweight, but through diligence and determination, has shed 75 pounds and reinvented herself as an image consultant and leader of a course called "How to Be Cool." As a former outcast in her school years, due to both her size and her interests, Kylie knows what it's like to feel out of place and promises to turn her clients from geek to chic in 8 weeks or less. In fact, her classes are causing such a splash that when playboy writer Ty Benedict moves from New York to Chicago to write for a men's magazine called Metro Guy, his very first big story is to interview Kylie about "How to Be Cool."
Now, Kylie would never admit it, but she isn't nearly as cool as she'd like her clients to be. She finds herself reliving her high school years and thinking about her high school crush as their 10-year reunion creeps up. She's more likely to be at home on Saturday night vegging out than hitting the clubs as she'd recommend to her clients. And, after a fire burns down her apartment building, she's temporarily living at home with her parents. Between the reunion, the article, and her living situation, Kylie's got her hands full. But can she pull things together enough to show Ty Benedict that she really does know how to be cool?
How to Be Cool was some of the best chick lit I've read all year. I'm used to these stories with a flawed heroine who can't help but lie to make herself and her life look better (think Queen of Babble by Meg Cabot and Can You Keep a Secret by Sophie Kinsella). I'm also used to the "fat girl loses the weight and suddenly finds love" (think Jemima J by Jane Green). But Johanna Edwards has taken a storyline that's been done to death and revamped it with an interesting, while still flawed, heroine who it was difficult not to like. The scrapes Kylie got herself into were completely relatable and many times throughout the book I found myself sympathizing with the realistic problems that she was facing. That's what made this book stand out from some of the other so-so chick lit I've read in the past. I've been there, and the way Johanna Edwards writes about the emotions and conflict in Kylie's life was exactly the way I felt at that time. I loved How to Be Cool and would definitely recommend it for someone in the mood for a stellar beach read that's much smarter and easier to relate to than your average chick lit novel.
Rated by buyers
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"My name is Kylie Chase and I used to be fat. I also used to be a nerd."
So begins Johanna Edwards' third novel, How to Be Cool, a hilarious tale about a savvy trendsetter who begins to have trouble keeping her inner dork a secret.
Scorned and ridiculed in high school and college because of her obesity, Kylie had, at age 22, an epiphany. She realized she need not remain fat for the rest of her life and, wonder of wonders, she sheds 75 pounds--changing from ugly duckling to beautiful swan. from dork to diva.
Now 29, Kylie determines to share the wealth of her transformation. She becomes a professional image consultant, a life coach teaching social skills to socially challenged nerds. Her classes on "How to Be Cool" are Chicago's hottest ticket.
Kylie dispenses commonsense wisdom to her clients--Dennis Moop, Charity St. James, Austin Dunbar, and others--helping them move from geek to chic. Trouble is, Kylie, who teaches self-confidence to others, is a big, blubbery ball of insecurity.
Soon, Kylie's carefully reconstructed life begins to fall apart. She becomes Exhibit #1 illustrating the truth of Murphy's law: If anything can go wrong, it will.
Her apartment burns down and she has to move back in with her parents. At age 29, this is definitely "uncool."
The "tenth" anniversary of her high school graduation (held two years late) turns out to be a disaster.
Her involvement with Ty Benedict, a handsome hunk of a reporter from Metro Guy who is writing an article about Kylie, bristles with potential heartbreak.
Scattered throughout this novel, the author provides 21 "Cool Rules," such as Cool Rule #5: "If you pretend to be someone you're not, make sure you have a backup plan--a credible way to 'fake it' in case you get caught" and Cool Rule #8: "There is such a thing as selective honesty. You don't always have to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth."
Johanna Edwards has penned a chuckle-producing, laughter-inducing romp through the faults and foibles of the human condition. Her writing is snappy and sassy, saucy and sophisticated. Translation: It's "cool."
How to Be Cool is a fun book to read. There's never a dull moment.
Johanna Edwards, the author of two previous novels, Your Big Break and The Next Big Thing, is an award-winning journalist and radio/TV producer who has written for Woman's Day and Figure magazines. Visit her website at www.johannaedwards.com (...)
Rated by buyers
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Nearly thirty years old, Kylie Chase feels she has come a long way since high school in Chicago. In her teens, she was reticent and obese. Now she dropped a ton of weight and kept it off, and provides in her seminar helping those like she was "How to Be Cool." However, when Kylie inadvertently overhears some high school peers deride her, she realizes her self esteem remains in negative numbers just like it was over a decade ago.
Reporter Ty Benedict thinks otherwise as he sees her as a great success; he is doing a story on her butterfly metamorphosis. He asks to escort her to her high school reunion, which she agrees because she is attracted to the handsome journalist. However, how will she react when she learns he is not quite the altruistic reporter he pretends to be?
As with the insightful THE NEXT BIG THING, HOW TO BE COOL is a superb look at a plus size person, who in this case is no longer a plus size, but her psyche is imprinted with the belief that she still remains too big in spite of the statistical evidence (waistline and weight, etc) and anecdotal proof (male second looks) to the contrary. The character driven tale focuses on the likable Kyle who though successful still struggles to convince herself that she is cool inside. Her uncool words of wisdom aside, this is delightful tale of the importance of believing in oneself especially when your history is otherwise.
Harriet Klausner
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