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Stacey Wiedower
Author
This Is 35
Four years after completing her first bucket list challenge, blogger and TV producer Erin Crawford is once again racing the clock, this time checking off 35 goals she wants to achieve by her 35th birthday. Meanwhile, the network behind YOLO, the reality show Erin produces, shifts her from behind the scenes to center stage as a participant. Amidst growing pressure at work and home, including a cross-country travel schedule that never seems to align with her new husband's, Erin has the added stress of a camera following her every move as she checks off her list for a national TV audience. From a wedding fiasco to a fateful dance lesson to a nemesis who's determined to make trouble in her brand new marriage, everything that can go wrong definitely does. So wrong, in fact, that Erin starts to wonder if YOLO is recording her life ... or ruining it.
Reviews
On the brink of her 35th birthday, a reality TV show coproducer and actress reexamines her existence and goals in Wiedower’s humorous and touching romantic novel. Before she turned 30, Erin Crawford completed a bucket list that included “start a blog.” The popularity of this blog and bucket list leads to Erin becoming the successful co-executive producer-turned star on YOLO, a TV show that follows Erin as she tries to complete all the items on her new bucket list before she turns 35. This list includes getting married to and completing a marathon and dance lessons with longtime boyfriend Ben Bertram. But, as Erin begins to buckle under the rigors of her life-turned-reality-show, she begins to suspect that there is a better way to gauge success and happiness besides a growing fan base. The chaos mounts and newlywed Erin travels from her home in Texas, to Los Angeles where she tapes her shows. Wiedower effectively portrays Erin and Ben, and the plight of the modern working couple who are devoted to both their relationship and their work but are unsuccessful in balancing the two. The flow of the narrative is, at times, disrupted by overworked plot points such as Erin’s anxiety about Ben’s clingy female coworker, and flat descriptions to fill in backstory. However, the playful tone and insightful observations on relationships and life’s changing priorities are entertaining enough to make for a light and appealing novel. (BookLife)
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