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{{infoboxsortinfobox1
|title=The Undomestic Goddess
|sort=Undomestic Goddess
|reviewer=Sue Magee
|genre=Women's Fiction
|summary=A top-flight lawyer becomes a housekeeper despite having no domestic skills. It's formulaic chicklitchick lit, but if you want an easy, light-hearted read then you could do worse than to borrow it from the library.
|rating=3
|buy=No
|borrow=Maybe
|format=Paperback
|pages=416
|publisher=Black Swan
|date=January 2006
|isbn=0552772747
|amazonukcover=<amazonuk>0552772747</amazonuk>|amazonusaznuk=0552772747|aznus=<amazonus>0552772747</amazonus>
}}
Samantha Sweeting is a lawyer and all her adult life she's had just one ambition. She is desperate to become a partner of the prestigious law firm for whom she works. Just as she's about to achieve this she apparently makes a massive error and runs away from it all. She gets on a train - the first train to anywhere - and finds herself stranded in a Cotswold village. There's a beautiful house nearby and she knocks on the door hoping for a glass of water, but the owner thinks that she's come for an interview for the post of housekeeper. Desperate for somewhere to stay she accepts the job despite the fact that she can't cook, launder or do anything else remotely domesticated. It's only the charms of the gardener that keep her in the job.
Having said all that, the second half of the book is better than the first. I found the Samantha who realised that she could relax and enjoy herself more believable than the lawyer. I did sense some spark between Samantha and Nathaniel and the portrayal of Samantha's reluctance and indecision about going back to her old life was well done. You could see all of the ending coming a mile away, but it all works out the way that you want it to, so that's no hardship.
Characterisation The characterisation is, well, extreme. No one ever does anything by halves and sometimes they undergo a complete personality change. An avuncular and friendly man turns out to be a villain. The nouveau-riche employers of the housekeeper turn out to have hearts of gold and feather brains. The gardener has hidden depths and an obliging mother. The lawyers get lawyers a bad name.
What redeems this book is the writing style. It's very easy to read. Kinsella has a good ear for dialogue and moves the story along at a steady pace. If you're looking for an undemanding summer holiday read then you could do a lot worse - Barbara Taylor Bradford's [[Emma's Secret]] or indeed any of her later work, springs to mind, but you could do better too. For something with a little more meat and style you could try Julian Fellowes' [[Snobs]], Anthony Capella's [[The Food of Love]] or Maggie O'Farrell's [[After You'd Gone]]. We also have a review of [[Finding Audrey by Sophie Kinsella|Finding Audrey by Sophie Kinsella]].
{{amazontext|amazon=0552772747}} {{waterstonestextamazonUStext|waterstonesamazon=46319290552772747}}
{{commenthead}}
|name=Wendy
|verb=said
|comment=I am off on hols on 13th June so may get this to read. It's also nice to have something easy going to read in between heavier books - like Stephen King.
}}
{{comment
|name=dizilizi
|verb=said
|comment=To start off with I thought the story was a tad on the silly side. I mean a lawyer getting mistaken for a cleaner then suddenly deciding it was the ideal job for her is rather unlikely. I have read some of Sophie's other books and they were much better, this one wasn't quite up to scratch I'm afraid.
}}
{{comment
|name=lhine
|verb=said
|comment=Agreed - this is very undemanding and probably what you'd take on your holidays to read by the pool. Some parts are just beyond belief knocking on strangers doors ,a highly successfull barrister legging it after a mistake and then pretending to be a housekeeper/chef (and getting away with it)etc. etc. But having said that it is chick-lit and should be taken, and enjoyed) as such!
}}
{{comment
|name=Sophie.emma
|verb=said
|comment=It is an entertaining easy read and a different theme to Sophie Kinsella's usual shopaholic books.
I didn't have any trouble staying interested and reading it from start to finish whilst on holiday, although I do agree that the ending became predictable near the end.
}}
|name=Amanda Borley
|verb=said
|comment=I enjoyed this book which is a light-hearted read. I am a fan of Sophie Kinsella's previous shopaholic series and was worried that she wouldn't be able to match the readability in this, however I was not disappointed.
}}
{{comment
|name=Sue
|verb=replied
|comment=I enjoyed the Shopaholic series, Amanda - I Just didn't feel that this was up to the same standard.
}}
{{comment
|name=Wendy
|verb=said
|comment=I have just read ''Can You Keep a Secret'' and this was to be my next read of Kinsella. I will give it a go as I need "no brainers" every now and then to balance out the horror of King and Herbert!}}