Jessica C. (jesskc) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 56 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
A real fun british chick lit story (narrator has a british accent and does a great job of reading the story with lots of wit and emotion!) I wasnt sure if i would be able to relate to the main character since i am not a mother but i actually liked her alot and saw alot of myself in her as a woman. A fun story with lots of humor and emotion i would reccomend this to anyone as it was very entertaining!!
Karen S. (boonies) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 6 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
An interesting book although I didn't find as funny as the reviewer.
Lara T. (LadyBook81) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 60 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I couldn't even finish this. it was just one big whine fest and I didn't like it.
Patricia C. (lucky888lady) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 72 more book reviews
Sometimes we don't appreciate ourselves as much as we should and take ourselves much to seriously as working moms. Reading about Kates everyday anxieties and stresses and how she handles them with ease that I could never find within myself helps us look at calamities happening around us with a little more humor. Really good read.
Monique T. (psomom) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 115 more book reviews
As a mom of two who works full time, I really appreciated the humor of this book!
Ashley Y. (ashley) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 9 more book reviews
Kate Reddy makes you want to laugh, cry, shout and jump for joy. Pearson's writing is colorful, eloquent and intellegent. A must read for all moms who have, had or want a job and for all dads who just aren't sure what goes on at mummy's office!
Desiree B. (Des) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 5 more book reviews
A must read for any working Mom!
Pavan L. (brookeworm) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 2 more book reviews
Really enjoyable read.
Ariana A. (islavet) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 15 more book reviews
A funny, touching, and rather frightening novel about trying to be a high-pressure career woman and a mother, and the difficult choices that have to be made.
Geraldine S. (nan) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 23 more book reviews
Story of a working mother at the start of the 21st century humor, drama good story
Christa S. (misschrista) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 19 more book reviews
I quit reading this about half way through. There are some funny incidents, but mostly there is no plot. It is just another "poor working mom trying to do everything" type book that rambles from day to day in her life. There just wasn't enough story to pull me in and keep me interested.
I just kept wanting her to quit her job and spend some times with her kids. I didn't understand why she had them if she had no interest in being around them. It was just really hard to have any empathy for this main character. I aso felt like gee, I have my own to-do lists, and everyday life stresses, why do I want to spend 400 pages reading about someone else's? I did like the author's writing and humor, but this subject matter was like watching paint peel.
Also it was really heavy with the British references. I understood some, but others went right over my head.
Also it was really heavy with the British references. I understood some, but others went right over my head.
Meredith R. (columbasimplex) - , reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 8 more book reviews
Allison Pearson's _I Don't Know How She Does It_ may (literally!) nearly scream from the cover that it's "chick lit" - against a slightly salmon pink background, a silhouette of a slender woman, her even her shadow outline clearly dressed in the ski-high pumps and suit-of-armor designer suit of the successful businesswoman of today, juggling silhouettes of a child's beloved toy, a pacifier, and of course, and overloaded briefcase - or maybe she's not juggling. Maybe she's finally, once and for all, tossing all of this up in the air for good. For all it's "chick lit" trappings, this novel, supported throughout by Pearson's finely wrought writing style suited to both wry comedy and genuinely affecting pathos (often within the same character's breath), explores issues that can't *just* be passed off as "chick lit" - it's a true gift to be able to deal with the real, serious, frequently life-changing ways in which gender affects all aspects of a certain class of educated, talented, career-tracked women.
Pearson manages to address the role of a woman in perhaps the least female-friendly career field possible, international stock and bond fund management (casual but somtimes brutal vulgarity and sexual harassment women fund analysts must bear with a tolerant smile; "the Mommy Track" that sends women seeking more time with their children down a dead-end of career advancement; and, perhaps worst of all for Kate, the endless last-minute business trips to clients from New York to Tokyo that she's expected to jet off on hours' notice, routinely missing key events in her two small children's lives. Although Kate's guilt is leavened by the gallows sense of humor that sustains her and her small cadre of working female friends, she is constantly gnawed at by the fear that 5-year-old Emily and 12-month Ben know and love the nanny better than their own mother, and that the stress and irritability that are a constant in Kate's life are taking their toll on her relationship with husband Richard.
For so many women, especially those who careers keep them in urban areas where the cost of living, not to mention a decent education, for one's children is gougingly high, _I Don't Know How She Does It_ may ring painfully true. Trying to keep her successful career to avoid the trauma that will surely come with abandoning her incredibly gift for economics and finance, Kate is nonetheless continually browbeaten and made to second-guess herself by the neverending and always conflicting demands of family life in a posh, closed London community that expects all mothers to stay home and bake from scratch for every school function. The open scening, in which Kate, freshly flown in from yet another international business foray at 2 in the morning, takes a vicious rolling pin to the crusts of store-bought mince pies in order to "distress" them adequately to pass as homemade and let her off as a "good mother" at her doctor's school is uproarious, but it also captures with jewel-like clarity the intense conflict, guilt, and shame Kate faces in a society that so recently encouraged women that they could "have it all." Kate is an enormously sympathetic character, and women on both sides of the work-home divide - and everywhere in between!!! - will understand her frustration, pain, and, above all, her ferocious and sustaining sense of humor.
Pearson manages to address the role of a woman in perhaps the least female-friendly career field possible, international stock and bond fund management (casual but somtimes brutal vulgarity and sexual harassment women fund analysts must bear with a tolerant smile; "the Mommy Track" that sends women seeking more time with their children down a dead-end of career advancement; and, perhaps worst of all for Kate, the endless last-minute business trips to clients from New York to Tokyo that she's expected to jet off on hours' notice, routinely missing key events in her two small children's lives. Although Kate's guilt is leavened by the gallows sense of humor that sustains her and her small cadre of working female friends, she is constantly gnawed at by the fear that 5-year-old Emily and 12-month Ben know and love the nanny better than their own mother, and that the stress and irritability that are a constant in Kate's life are taking their toll on her relationship with husband Richard.
For so many women, especially those who careers keep them in urban areas where the cost of living, not to mention a decent education, for one's children is gougingly high, _I Don't Know How She Does It_ may ring painfully true. Trying to keep her successful career to avoid the trauma that will surely come with abandoning her incredibly gift for economics and finance, Kate is nonetheless continually browbeaten and made to second-guess herself by the neverending and always conflicting demands of family life in a posh, closed London community that expects all mothers to stay home and bake from scratch for every school function. The open scening, in which Kate, freshly flown in from yet another international business foray at 2 in the morning, takes a vicious rolling pin to the crusts of store-bought mince pies in order to "distress" them adequately to pass as homemade and let her off as a "good mother" at her doctor's school is uproarious, but it also captures with jewel-like clarity the intense conflict, guilt, and shame Kate faces in a society that so recently encouraged women that they could "have it all." Kate is an enormously sympathetic character, and women on both sides of the work-home divide - and everywhere in between!!! - will understand her frustration, pain, and, above all, her ferocious and sustaining sense of humor.
Claudia K. (budsmomtoo) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 70 more book reviews
FUN TO LISTEN TO WITH HER BRITISH ACCENT...A STORY ANY WORKING MOM CAN RELATE TO!
Janet B. (jannie) reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 52 more book reviews
Hilarious read.
Kristie M. reviewed I Don't Know How She Does It : The Life of Kate Reddy, Working Mother on + 30 more book reviews
Easy listening, good chic-book. A good choice when you want something light and fun.