Lynda C. (Readnmachine) reviewed on + 1474 more book reviews
'Beach Town' has a strong understructure that carries several plot lines.
One deals with the headaches of trying to manage a location shoot for a movie that -- even to the non-movie person -- shows signs of trouble from the very beginning. There's the too-famous-too-soon rapper making his film debut, the alcoholic script-writer floundering to produce a shootable script, the director with delusions of grandeur and dreams of an unlimited budget, not to mention missing port-a-potties and disgruntled locals.
And while location manager Greer Hennessy tries to keep all these plates spinning, she's also dodging her long-lost father who seems to want to re-connect, dickering for the rights to blow up a long-closed casino that holds treasured memories for many of the townspeople, and flirting cautiously with the sexy mayor.
There's nothing wrong with this good-hearted romance, and lots of backstage information about the myriad details that go into movie-making. But readers hoping for another one of Andrews' screwball he-done-her-wrong-and-now-she's-going-to-make-him-pay comedies will be disappointed.
One deals with the headaches of trying to manage a location shoot for a movie that -- even to the non-movie person -- shows signs of trouble from the very beginning. There's the too-famous-too-soon rapper making his film debut, the alcoholic script-writer floundering to produce a shootable script, the director with delusions of grandeur and dreams of an unlimited budget, not to mention missing port-a-potties and disgruntled locals.
And while location manager Greer Hennessy tries to keep all these plates spinning, she's also dodging her long-lost father who seems to want to re-connect, dickering for the rights to blow up a long-closed casino that holds treasured memories for many of the townspeople, and flirting cautiously with the sexy mayor.
There's nothing wrong with this good-hearted romance, and lots of backstage information about the myriad details that go into movie-making. But readers hoping for another one of Andrews' screwball he-done-her-wrong-and-now-she's-going-to-make-him-pay comedies will be disappointed.
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