Preview

Comparison Of Julia Kent And New York Times

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
979 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Comparison Of Julia Kent And New York Times
Julia Kent is an American USA Today and New York Times bestselling author best known for writing edgy contemporary romantic comedy and boundary pushing contemporary adult books. Since starting out in 2013, she has attained much success selling over 1.5 million novels with 16 titles making the USA Today bestseller list and four on the New York Times bestsellers. Some of her most popular novels include The Shopping series, The Obedient Series, The Random Series, and The Her Billionaires Series. The popularity of her novels on both sides of the Atlantic has seen her novels translated into different languages including German and French. Julia Kent writes about a variety of issues ranging from new adult rock stars to BBWs to billionaires. However, …show more content…
Most of the inspiration for the books is drawn from Julia Kent’s vast experience as a mystery shopper. Over the course of thirteen years, she has written short books and numerous articles on her mystery shopping experiences. The experience was a great one as they provided the foundation for the hilarious narratives of her heroines that meet men in places such as toilets, the office, in high school and even out shopping. Having lived such a life, she would know that you meet all kinds of men even at an oil change. Even as most of the novels are contemporary romances people with wealthy men as the heroes, it still has the quintessential romance elements such as steamy love sessions, the inevitable tension between the lovers, the stolen kisses, and wild excitement that Julia Kent writes with elegance to leave the reader drooling. The men are masculine and resolute persons that are given either to their jobs or to a life of no commitment. The women are driven by an inexplicable desire for the men probably who seem to be so unattainable. It is all fireworks when the two meet, with sparks flying due to the unavoidable

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Better Essays

    The children’s novel ‘45 and 47 Stella Street and everything that happened’ (Honey, 1995) written by Elizabeth Honey is a novel aimed at pre-adolescent girls. However in saying that boys around the same age would also find this book enjoyable. The story is told from the perspective of Hinni who is an 11 year old girl. It is about her and her ‘Gang’, which includes her best friend Zev, Her sister Danielle and Frank, Zev’s 6-year-old next-door neighbour who resides at 47 Stella Street. The book tells of their efforts to expose the “Phonies” and their secret life. It is evident through analysis of the book that there are sly implications toward enforcing the concepts of masculinity and femininity on young readers using the strategies of narrative theory.…

    • 1008 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    She wrote many books that are very popular to read such as “Perfect Chemistry” or “How to Ruin My Teenage Life.” She understands teens’ life experiences. She loves to write a book about teenagers. She is the bestselling teen romance novels. She is well known author. I highly recommend you to read her books. She is the best!…

    • 920 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    There is a common theme in all Nicholas spark’s books and movies, and that is that each of the main female characters fit into the feminine ideology, there are all thin, white, have blonde or brown hair, great features, and much more. The women in the films are also the ones who are always falling for the dominant, hard-working, ‘masculine’ man, who is also depicted as very handsome with masculine traits. Of course, the men in the film usually end up breaking the girls heart during the middle of the story plot, but they always come back to them in the end, no matter all of the random deaths that occur in Nicholas Spark’s films, it is always a ‘happy ever after ending’. Each and every one of Spark’s films provides stereotypes of femininity as…

    • 178 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Claudia Valentine is smart, clever, thoughtful, strong, assertive and ruthless private investigator that manipulates her voice in order the gain information about the death of Mark Banister. Day uses the character of Claudia to express her purpose of commenting on the development of Sydney, the use of new technology and the rise feminism in he 1970-80’s. The humour and wit of Claudia is entertaining with the puns “curse, cursor” to illustrate the twin aspect of her investigation. It highlights the curse of crime and is linked to the computer jargon of the curser on the screen. Day also challenges the stereotypical role of a female by, making Claudia the though female detective and not the general thought male detective in crime genres. “There was a good looking blond in there as well”. This quote is form the very first page of the novel where we get a slight description of the main character. The reader’s initial decision would be that the character is a male due to the general stereotypical description of the person in the bed. But further on we read…

    • 1020 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In Rebecca du Maurier appears to conform to the conventions of the romantic genre however, du Maurier has also subverted the genre of romance through her representation of the relationship between the narrator and Maxim and the structure of the novel. She has also incorporated of elements of the gothic genre and the psychological thriller.…

    • 1141 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Ellen Hopkins Book Report

    • 712 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In this roller coaster of a book, I am currently on page 326 out of 537. The author of this book is Ellen Hopkins. When I started this book I thought it was just another story about a teenager that didn’t have any friends but that all changed when she went to Nevada. Throughout this journal I will be visualizing, predicting and questioning.…

    • 712 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The main female and male characters in “The Maltese Falcon” each have their own set of goals they want to achieve and the only way they can be achieved is with the help of private detective Sam Spade. The men in the novels utilize stereotypical masculine techniques such as intimidation, violence and bribery while women use not as aggressive techniques. The women achieve their goals by using stereotypical female techniques by using their innocence as well as their sexuality to seduce Spade into helping them. The men and the women in the novel put to use traditional gender specific means of leverage to get what they want.…

    • 1734 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    New Woman: Book Synopsis

    • 747 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The “New Woman” is “appealing in her appearance” (Moeller 35), independent, and changes all assumptions about femininity. She is one who “go[es] to the cinema in the evenings… buy[s] Elegant World and the film magazines,” (Wehrling 721-723) she can be seen as promiscuous and sexually liberated. Mia Pinneberg models all these adjectives. She wears her “brown suit and smart hat” (Fallada 278) voiding any feminine assumptions, she formerly worked as a hostess at a night club, and even upon aging, continues her quest for social superiority through her constant evening parties and booze. Mia is the independent “New Woman” that bounces around from lover to lover with only her self-interest in mind. She is currently using Jachmann, her “current lover” (Fallada 107) for solely her own pleasures, and openly admits that she “sleep[s] with him” (Fallada 107). All of these aesthetic qualities and aspirations demonstrate how society saw the “New Woman.” However, underneath the mass stereotype for modernized bourgeois women, the pressures and expectations create an alienation from themselves, others and society itself as displayed through Mia.…

    • 747 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The book Alias Grace by Margaret Atwood is a beautifully articulated work of literature. The book presents a Victorian mode spiced up with spooky plot twists. Although the book presents a Victorian mode it is not entirely comprised of Romantic ideals. Atwood is a modern writer who was influenced by the major paradigms of both American and Canadian history. Since she was a child, she was fascinated by the true story of Grace Marks. Grace Marks was a teenage, Canadian domestic worker of the nineteenth century who was convicted upon the murder of her employer (Thomas Kinnear) and his mistress (Nancy Montgomery). In this novel, Atwood reimagines Grace's enigmatic story. And in doing so, she embodies a signature theme, the injustices of women's lives which also conveys the literary importance of the book. Also, she portrays the hypocrisy and ignorance of Victorian culture. Atwood also cleverly uses the characters' conversations to convey topics such as prostitution, spiritualism, and treatment for the insane. This is one factor that makes Atwood's style unique. Alias Grace has a style that is thoroughly logical yet complicated. This is not the case with the author's tone which remains indifferent throughout the book. And so, this intriguing novel is one of unique style, indifferent tone, a signature theme that conveys the injustices of women's lives that was influenced by all of the important eras pertaining to both American and Canadian Literature.…

    • 1182 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    These women authors have served as an eye-opener for readers, both men and women alike, in the past, and hopefully still in the present. (There are still cultures in the world today, where women are treated as unfairly as women were treated in prior centuries).…

    • 968 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In our class text “The life and crimes of Harry Lavender” Claudia Valentine, is a private detective of the 1960’s who symbolises women liberation. The deceiving facade of Sydney which she lives in portrays the values of corruption, addiction and crime. This distinctive world created depicts the distinctive voices of Claudia and Harry Lavender, the antagonist of this novel. While describing Harry’s power, domination and concealment over Sydney. Claudia decodes the mysteries and understands more about herself and the distinctive world she resides in.…

    • 961 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Best Essays

    For the longest time women have played the secondary roles in many novels written by men, which many times they were only used for effect on the story. However, the two novels that will be discussed in this paper show men in those secondary roles. In the book Brown Girl Brownstone, by Paule Marshall, we see the secondary character played by a man who by first appearance seems like a sloth. In some aspects he serves as a foil to the mother figure in the story. His death in the story serves as a turning point in the story, in which change occurs for the main character as well as other characters. In the other book that will be analyzed in this writing, titled Mama Day, a city bread young man finds himself at the center of many mysterious happenings, when he visits his girlfriend Cocoa’s hometown. His death in the novel is what ultimately allows for resolution at the end. What should one make of these events in the novels? If a universal view could be established it would be to say that these men act as literary catalysts for change for the stories in which they take part in. Although they may not be the main focus of the story they still play a significant role in how the plot unfolds, and without them many aspects of the stories would fall apart. Much like a catalyst in a chemical reaction these characters become part of the process to help change the plot. In hopes to understand why they are literary catalyst, comparing their parts in the plot to that of the definition of catalyst is necessary, building upon the basis of the definition and relating it to their situations and motivation or actions…

    • 1737 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    Have you ever been labeled by people for doing something that you did not do? Another word for that is libel, libel is a false published statement that is meant to hurt a person's reputation. New York Times vs. Sullivan is a case where Sullivan sued New York Times for libel. The case went to the Alabama court ending in failure for New York Times, the case reached a final decision in the Supreme Court. Sullivan brought the case to the court claiming that New York Times committed libel and was purposely hurting his reputation as a public official.…

    • 644 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Fifth Business Women

    • 1566 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Little, Dave. Catching the Wind in a Net: the Religious Vision of Roberston Davies. Toronto, Ontario: ECW Press, 2006.…

    • 1566 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Who does not enjoy a good mystery story? Popular literature abounds with examples, raging from the controversial work of Dan Brown to the horrific work of Stephen King. This genre, rooted in the Victorian tradition of Edgar Allan Poe, Wilkie Collins and Arthur Conan Doyle, certainly has a wide following. On the beach, on the subway, people escape into the worlds of these authors. Although many female writers claim to be the “Queen of Crime Fiction”, it is really Agatha Christie against whom all others are measured. Even many years after her death, readers appreciate Agatha Christie’s novels because of her strong characters, her interesting setting and her strong morality.…

    • 669 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics