While this novel stands alone, it can also be seen as a spin off of Lessing's successful first novel, She's Got Issues. Tales of two sisters: She's Got Issues follows shoe-obsessed fashionista Chloe Rose, while Miss Understanding follows slobby feminist Zoe Rose. Both books, each in their own way, also take a look into the underbelly of the fashion magazine world, focusing on the fictional Issues magazine.
Issues magazine is populated by a number of interesting characters: the ditzy "mental health editor" (read: advice columnist), the clueless fifty-year-old editor who dresses like she's twenty, and the classic evil-to-the-core boss, just to name a few. One of the country's premier women's magazines, Issues focuses on fashion, beauty, and all things superficial.
Owner and managing editor, Dan Princely brings Zoe Rose, formerly of The Radical Mind, on board as deputy editor because he knows the magazine is ready for a change. His staff, on the other hand, disagree.
Miss Understanding chronicles Zoe's quest to change the way women relate to each other--to, as she puts it, "raid the locker room of the female psyche and rip open the frilly facade of femininity once and for all" --using Issues (newly renamed Miss Understanding: A Girl's Guide to Girls) as her platform.
The clash between feminism and the desire to be feminine is at the heart of this zany novel. Through Zoe, Lessing asks a number of difficult questions about what it means to be a woman today and why exactly women fight among themselves instead of helping each other to reach the top. The novel, while entertaining, does little to provide solutions to those problems.
And, even more unfortunately, Zoe's over-the-top hypochondria and other neuroses take away both from her ability to affect solutions in that fictional world and from readers' ability to relate to her as a protagonist.
A magazine veteran, Stephanie Lessing worked as Copy Chief for Mademoiselle before becoming a freelancer for Bride's, Glamour, Self, Vanity Fair, and Vogue among others. Her first novel, She's Got Issues, was published in 2005.
Armchair Interviews says: Miss Understanding is a fun, quirky book, but don't expect too much from it.