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Miss Match: A Novel Paperback – March 26, 2002

3.6 3.6 out of 5 stars 17 ratings

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For drama teacher Kathryn Lamb, being thirty-five and single means an endless run on the dating wheel. Everyone from her happily married sister to her meddling neighbor thinks it’s time for Kitty to take drastic action to find herself a wonderful man. So she enrolls in New York’s premier matchmaking service, which guarantees five potential mates or her money back. And if Walker Hart, the gorgeous entrepreneur of the company, is any example of the men who will be parading to her apartment, then Kitty will definitely be a satisfied customer.

But as each promising encounter turns into a disaster, Kitty realizes that the only guy who has captured her romantic heart is the one who doesn’t believe in happily ever after. Sexy and sassy,
Miss Match is a hilarious first novel that delves into the anxieties of the mating game, where every now and then one has to bend the rules. . . .
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

When 35-year-old drama teacher Kathryn Lamb joins her nosy neighbor's dating service, Six in the City, she meets brilliant entrepreneur Walker Hart, the temporary head of Six. He's living in his mother's penthouse and running her company while she's in Europe getting married or is it divorced? yet again. Though the two share an undeniable chemistry, Walker's serial-marrying mama has made him the poster boy for confirmed bachelors everywhere, and Kathryn's unwilling to settle for anything less than wedding bells. And so Kathryn embarks on a series of disastrous dates with other men, and Walker remains nearby enough to drive them both crazy. Carroll's debut is precisely what Ivy touts it as "Chick-lit meets contemporary romance." With its many encounters between the heroine and men other than the hero, this cutesy comedy will appeal more to fans of the former category. However, even chick-lit readers and hip Manhattanites (the book's target readership) will tire of the characters' aimless repartee, which is more scripted than sincere, and the numerous references to the trendy and designer. Despite an obvious allusion to Sex and the City, this dialogue-driven drama isn't likely to hook fans of that series.

Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Saddled with running his free-spirited mother's trendy matchmaking service while she is off on her latest honeymoon, financial analyst and resolute bachelor Walker "Bear" Hart finds his single status in grave danger when quick-witted, re freshingly candid drama teacher Kitty Lamb signs up for the service and totally disrupts his life. Sassy dialog, appealing protagonists, and a generally lively pace carry this story through one disastrous date after another. Squarely aimed at the urban singles market, this sexy, sometimes hilarious romantic comedy offers a happy ending that puts it firmly in the romance camp, but it is also brash, smart, and unconventional enough to attract a broader readership, as well. Carroll is a native New Yorker and an actress.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Ivy Books (March 26, 2002)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 384 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0804119996
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0804119993
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 6.4 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 4 x 1 x 6.75 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.6 3.6 out of 5 stars 17 ratings

About the author

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Leslie Carroll
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I used to tell people that I was born in Manhattan and raised in the Bronx; but the truth is that apart from the stellar education I received at the Fieldston School in Riverdale, much of who I am was shaped by my two grandmothers, who encouraged me to follow my bliss. My East Side grandmother took me to (now, sadly gone) FAO Schwarz, the New York City Ballet, and afternoon tea at the Plaza Hotel, where I dreamed of becoming another Eloise. My West Side grandmother took me to the Central Park carousel and the zoo and treated me to colorful paper parasols and gummy, lukewarm pretzels from the vendors whose wares my East Side grandmother deemed too "dirty" for human consumption.

There are writers on both sides of my family, and although I always loved to write, I never anticipated that it would become my profession. I had wanted to be a ballerina; and though my club feet were corrected at birth (from the stilettos I adore now, you'd never know) and my short Achilles tendons made my toes turn in (corrected at the age of 9), I was never going to end up en pointe.

About a year later, I decided to become an actress when (if?) I grew up, and I never looked back. I majored in Theatre at Cornell University, worked in summer stock, and took classes with a couple of acknowledged masters. I performed Shakespeare and other classics in New York parks, basements, church choir lofts, and the occasional Off-Broadway theatre; then founded and ran my own nonprofit theatre company for several years. And when things got slow, and I found myself working three survival jobs simultaneously (one of them as a journalist and editor), I decided it was time to pursue an additional creative avenue.

I began writing in 1998; and my first title was published in 2002. Since then, I've had 21 books published in three genres: women's fiction, historical fiction (under the pen names Amanda Elyot and Juliet Grey) and historical nonfiction--making a mark as one of the few Americans who is an expert on the loves and lives if European royalty, a niche that's taken me to two royal weddings.

In what I laughingly refer to as my spare time, I'm still a professional actress, working when the scripts and the roles excite me.

Bringing both professions together, I also narrate audiobooks, specializing in historical fiction, and am the recipient of an Audie Earphones award for my narration.

Please visit me at: www.lesliecarroll.com

Customer reviews

3.6 out of 5 stars
3.6 out of 5
17 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on June 2, 2005
"Miss Match" is a funny romantic comedy about the lengths some people will go to find a significant other. Kitty has just been dumped by her fiance who'd rather look in the mirror than at her. She reluctantly signs up for a dating service owned by her neighbor after much cajoling, and feels an immediate connection to the person running the agency, Walker Hart (the owners millionaire son).

Walker is also intrigued by her, but because of the many, many marriages of his eccentric mother, he doesn't believe in a happily ever after that includes in matrimony. True to his commitment to his new client, he sets her up on five dates. He has conveniently ensconced himself in her apartment when his roof leaks due to a storm. Sure he could have gone to a hotel, but instead he crashes with her.

Each is a disaster in its own right - whether she is fending off the advances of a married man, or mistaken as a hooker; at the end of each date, Walker is there to lend an ear. Feeling guilty about one date, he offers a sixth date free.

He has a strong attraction to her, and the story never makes it clear if he's purposely picking all the wrong men for her. I loved his klutzyness too. He was always banging into stuff and breaking things. The story is chock full of sophisticated banter, show tunes, and literary quotes, not something you see everyday, thus making it a refreshing change of pace. A great beach read of escape from mundane office work.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2002
In New York, to shut up her nosy neighbor "Yenta", Kathryn "Kitty" Lamb agrees to try the woman's matchmaking service. At Six in the City, Kitty meets Walker "Bear" Hart, a successful financial guru, who is filling in for his mother Yenta as she travels in Wales on her latest honeymoon. Bear and Kitty are immediately attracted to one another especially their shared warped sense of humor, but she wants love and marriage while he avoids commitment.

Kitty begins dating the men that Bear provides to her, but none seem to compare with her host. He, in turn, is jealous of each date he arranges for Kitty. However, though he wants her, Bear knows that relationships are fleeting as he learned observing his mother. Kitty knows who her true match is, but expects to miss out on the love of a lifetime because he cannot escape the lessons of a lifetime.

MISS MATCH is an engaging amusing contemporary romance that contains a serious undertone on what parents leave with their children including those grown up. The story line is fun due to the lead couple's reactions to one another and the antics of the five dates. Though done many times before, readers will enjoy Kitty's trip through the looking glass of singles dating in Manhattan because Leslie Carroll uses the eccentric cast to provide freshness to the scene. The ensemble thoroughly entertains the audience.

Harriet Klausner
3 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on April 22, 2002
The best analogy I can think of for "Miss Match" is that it is like flavored steamed milk without the coffee. The plot was good on first review: Heroine pays money to be set up with six men, hoping to find Mr. Right, but instead ends up falling for Hero, who runs the dating service. The biggest problem was the narrative, as dramatic and nonsensical as a cheap Hollywood comedy as ever there was. Maybe that, in and of itself, is the problem inherent in this book: the author thought she was writing a script for a movie version of "Sex in the City."
I'll be fair and assert that there are moments of brilliant wit in this novel (Kitty Lamb's attempt to teach charades to the prostitutes while cooling her heels in jail and her coaching of actor Rick Byron during his impromptu visit to her drama class are the ones that stand out), but for the most part, most of the book is so annoyingly smug that I had to put it down and walk away instead of tossing it into the circular file or running it through the shredder. Did Carroll think that any reader with an eighth-grade level of comprehension would not shudder at the clichés that pop up again and again like those annoying Java script ads for pornographic web sites?
Future authors, be warned and take note: the people with walk-on parts had more personality than the leads. Most of the characters were underdeveloped, like pencil sketches walking through unfinished animation cells. Carroll's hero and heroine could have solved all their problems with a few minutes of authentic conversation but spend most of the book milking their winning formulas, "slapstick" for Walker and "silliness" for Kitty. Kitty's sister is underused, as is Walker's mother; we don't see the conversation with Ruth Hart which drove Kitty to "Six the City." In my opinion, this would have deepened Kitty's personality and mitigated some of the damage done by the author's desire to make her as charming and clever as her archetype, Carrie Bradshaw.
The last skeet off the launcher is the title of the matchmaking agency: "Six in the City." The first time it was clever, but Carroll broke a cardinal rule of writing (Do Not be Redundant in Your Use of Terminology) by mentioning the moniker no less than twenty times in an endeavor to invoke the similarly named HBO Emmy-winning series. By the end I was rolling my eyes each time I saw those four words together; however that gripe is miniscule compared to the others that cropped up while I slogged through this mess.
I highly recommend this book to readers with no interest in material with substance or style.
3 people found this helpful
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