Candy Girl was a recommendation from some friends I went to dinner with last night. We stopped at Barnes and Noble and they both virtually shoved it into my hands. So I bought it.
I read it in one sitting, staying up way too late. Candy Girl is the year in a life of an amateur stripper who ends up "semi-pro." She lives in Minneapolis, which makes the book an interesting reading experience because I know all the places she was talking about.
Her sense of humor is absolutely fabulous, and the book is a "tell it like it is" commentary on how a person who is generally a "good girl" might be interested in stripping. I think she leaves most of the negative details out (she only mentions three bad experiences and glosses over them in a single paragraph), but that ends up being okay. If I wanted to read a political commentary on the bad aspects of stripping, I'd read something by some CNN correspondant. Diablo enjoyed stripping and doesn't apologize for it, which I totally respect.
This is a quick, well-written memoir. I totally recommend it, but only if you're past that age where you briefly fantasize about stripping. Otherwise you might run out and do it and neither I nor Diablo want to be responsible for that.
3 comments:
http://blogs.citypages.com/dcody/
I completely agree with your description and opinions of this book. It was sent to me by a friend in California. I really enjoyed it because I live in the cities and it made it seem more personal. I did, however, consider running out and hitting the clubs for a little "extra" money. Thankfully, I came to my senses before making any crazy decisions.
I follow her blog regularly and will most likely see the movie Juno.
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