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Created page with "{{infobox |title= Spandex and the City |author=Jenny Colgan |reviewer= Magda Healey |genre=Women's Fiction |summary=A chick lit with a superhero twist (and what about that awf..."
{{infobox
|title= Spandex and the City
|author=Jenny Colgan
|reviewer= Magda Healey
|genre=Women's Fiction
|summary=A chick lit with a superhero twist (and what about that awful purple Lycra suit?), ''Spandex and the City'' spans a few genres with the usual Jenny Colgan panache, humanity and a good sprinkling of humour. Recommended for geeky romance fans and for fans of geeky romance, this would make a great movie script, but works fine as a novel too.
|rating=4
|buy=Maybe
|borrow=Yes
|pages=368
|publisher=Orbit
|date=May 2017
|isbn= 978-0356505442
|website= http://www.jennycolgan.com
|video=
|amazonuk=<amazonuk> 0356505448</amazonuk>
}}

Jenny Colgan is best known for her charming chick lit, funny, well written and set in interesting and well described locations. She also writes Dr Who novels and ''Spandex and the City'', recently published by Orbit, an outfit that specialises in science-fiction and fantasy, crosses - and spans the chick lit and the science-fiction worlds.

Touted as a super-hero romantic comedy, ''Spandex and the City'' features a girl-next-door Holly, a typically insecure 20-something rom-com heroine, enjoying her life in Centerton (Colgan's stand in for Gotham). When a handsome stranger she meets at a bar turns out to be the ''Ultimate Man'', a vigilante superhero straight from the Marvel or DC universe (the superpowers are more of a Marvel kind, but the character - both of the UM and of his adversary - reference Batman, among others), she can't help falling for him.

There are difficulties - no least the fact that having sex, or any kind of emotional intimacy, with a superhero is a risky endeavour. And in addition to cutely dorky dating mishaps, more pop culture references than a Tarantino medley and enough high-adrenaline incidents to fill an action flick, ''Spandex and the City'' raises some more serious questions about the modern lives we live in the Internet connected world, and maybe even about the nature of humanity. But - and given the genre, this won't be a spoiler - all's well that ends well.

I enjoyed ''Spandex and the City'' and I think it would make a splendid, pretty much ready-made script for a movie. As a novel, it occasionally faltered, and I felt it couldn't decide if it wants to be a 'serious adventure drama' or a 'light hearted comedy'. But that might be a nature of trans-genre popular fiction, and as much of a strength as a weakness. Holly was a goose throughout, though, and for that - for not giving her a go at being a hero even for a page - I'm taking a half-star off. Still, very much recommended for geeky rom-com fans, romantic geeks and everybody in between.

A diverse variety of contemporary romance can be found at [[Bookbag's Chick Lit Picks]] while [[Supergods: Our World in the Age of the Superhero by Grant Morrison]] covers the superheroes proper.

{{amazontext|amazon= 0356505448}}
{{amazonUStext|amazon= 0356505448}}

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