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Frenemies [Paperback]

Megan Crane
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 291 pages
  • Publisher: 5 Spot Pub (20 Jun 2007)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0446698555
  • ISBN-13: 978-0446698559
  • Product Dimensions: 13.3 x 2.2 x 20.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 3,555,632 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Megan Crane
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Product Description

Review

Frenemies is a hugely enjoyable novel with brilliant, convincing characters and dialogue. It's romantic, funny, intelligent, believable and gripping. I couldn't put it down - Marian Keyes

A fresh, upbeat read… explores what it's like finally to have it out with that friend we love to hate - Martha O'Connor, author of The Bitch Goddess Notebook --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Marian Keyes

Frenemies is a hugely enjoyable...It's romantic, funny, intelligent, believable and gripping. I couldn't put it down --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
By Leah Graham TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
At the back of Frenemies, Megan Crane discusses why she decided to write Frenemies and she said she decided to write it after watching the movie Mean Girls and says that real life is so much worse than what is portrayed in the movie and that she wanted to write about `that' girl, the girl who will stab you in the back whilst looking you in the eye. That is pretty much Frenemies in a nutshell and is a pretty good topic to focus on. A lot of chick lit books do indeed feature cheating but I think this is the first book I have read where it's someone you believe to be a friend who does the dirty with your boyfriend which is what happens to Gus. To make it even worse, after Helen betrays Gus by cheating with Nate, she then acts like nothing has happened and that she a Gus can be BFFs thus making her a `frenemy' (a mash up of `friend' and `enemy', if you weren't already aware!).

The book is told entirely from Gus's point of view, which means we get to know Gus really really well and I admit, I liked her. I liked the fact she had lived in her same one-bedroom apartment pretty much since College and I loved that her apartment looked as if she had robbed a library, with piles of books everywhere. It made it so easy to imagine her apartment, full to the brim with books. Sure, some things annoyed me about Gus: how she easily believed Nate would come back to her and had been brainwashed into cheating with Helen, and how she kept letting Helen follow her and talk to her, whereas any sane person would be slapping her and telling her to get lost. Apart from those minor irritations I liked Gus very much along with her hilarious dog Linus.

There were a few other characters present in the book; Nate and Helen for starters and I didn't like either of them at all, Gus tries to make us think Nate is somehow `trapped' with Helen but I think that was just so she could delude herself into thinking she could get him back more than there being any real truth to the matter. I would have liked a bit more of an explanation as to why Helen did what she did, but she never told us. The other important characters to the book were Amy Lee and Georgia, Gus's two best friends. I wasn't a huge fan of Amy Lee. She was very snippy and short with Gus and although I could understand why (Gus does get VERY annoying about Helen/Nate) I didn't like that she did it. Amy Lee completely explodes toward Gus and Georgia at one point in the book and it all gets explained away very conveniently and, like Gus, I wanted more of an explanation. I know she had her excuses for it (an excuse I saw coming) but I found it annoying that that is what she blamed it on. I loved Georgia though, she was my second favourite character. Finally we had Henry Farland, Nate's room mate and Gus's sparring partner. We learn a lot about him via Gus but all wasn't as she told us, and I did find him a bit charming!

Frenemies is written in a very chatty tone, making it easy for me to get into the book and speed through the pages. The book is under 300 pages long, and doesn't feel too short or too long. The book is set in the USA, in Boston which I loved. I've never been to Boston, but it's a place I would love to visit so I liked the fact Gus lived there, near to Fenway Park! I definitely can't wait to read more of Megan's books after I enjoyed Frenemies and I'm very glad that, so far, I don't have THAT girl in my life...
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Loved it 14 April 2011
Format:Paperback
I had never heard of Megan Crane when I came across this book. I didn't think anyone could rival Marian Keyes until I read Frenemies. I read it over a weekend as I couldn't put it down. Loved the plot, the characters and the sense of humour. Can't recommend highly enough.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  25 reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
It was better than I had expected it to be 26 Sep 2007
By Ratmammy - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
FRENEMIES by Megan Crane
September 26, 2007

Rating: 4 Stars

FRENEMIES was a pleasant surprise for me. It's chick lit but one of the better ones I've read in the past few years, where a lot in this genre is starting to sound the same. The main character, Gus (Augusta) is about to turn 30 and she's not doing well in regards to a relationship that went sour. Her boyfriend has ended up with a college friend, and she feels betrayed. Since the breakup, Gus has begun to act up in public. In the opening chapter we will get a good idea how bad off Gus is, when she throws a tantrum in front of many of her friends in a public bar because Nate and ex-friend Helen have shown up as well. It doesn't help that they have mutual friends and have been friends since college.

The book is funny and smart, with a main character that is not one-dimensional as oftentimes happens in books of this genre. Even her friends are interesting, and have their own issues to deal with.I laughed a lot while I read this book, and can honestly say I enjoyed it. I definitely recommend FRENEMIES.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Not all women are this pathetic. 14 April 2010
By KY Chickie - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This book would be much more believable if the main characters were on the cusp of turning 20 instead of 30. Gus (the main character) & her friends spend all of their time chasing the wrong men & obsessing over every little thing they do. They create loud inappropriate scenes in public, start rumors about people they don't like, & spend an inordinate amount of time detailing the physical short comings of both themselves and others. These ladies are characterized as smart, educated women with meaningful careers, and yet their actions more closely resemble that of insecure, image conscious teenagers desperate to hang out with the cool kids. The author says she was inspired by the movie "Mean Girls", and I would assume wanted to show what happens when the "mean girls" reach the next stage of the life. The problem is that while there will always be some women who never grow out of the mean catty teenager phrase, most of us do. As an almost 30 year old adult, I have no problem avoiding the "mean girls;" its no longer high school & they no longer control the lunch table. This book is definitely chick lit at its worst; there is nothing funny or entertaining about it. Mostly it just makes me sad that anyone thinks this is how grown women act.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Knows how to write that hunky male lead... 10 Jan 2008
By LaMonita - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
but doesn't always get the female characters right. Not to say that I didn't love this book and think that Megan Crane is a excellent writer, her style is very casual and humorous, and boy does she know something about sexual tension. But I found Gus to be a little too self-indulgent, and she gave Helen such little value that it is a wonder they were ever friends to begin with. Don't people drop friends like that by the time they are 30? Or if they don't totally get rid of them, don't they minimize their contact with them? And I doubt that Helen would be so bold to assume that Gus would just get over the boyfriend stealing. However, I did like Henry quite a lot, and the relationships with her other friends, who at times also seemed like frenemies. Gus' evolution, while painful, did leave the reader with the hope that growing up may not be easy, but there's a light at the end of the tunnel, and sometimes you lose friends along the way.
I guess the final thought I had as I was finishing this book was about 20something/30something women and the maturation of friendship. Makes me reevaluate how I treat my own friends, as well myself. Because when it comes down to it, are you your own worst frenemy? Thanks again Megan, looking forward to another great book.
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