Leah
I must admit that I haven’t actually read the book that put Lauren Weisberger firmly on the Chick Lit map in her debut novel The Devil Wears Prada, however I have seen the movie (and thoroughly enjoyed it). I have read one of Lauren’s books, Everyone Worth Knowing, but I barely remember it as it was so long ago since I read it. It was a harmless read, though, as far as I do remember and when I heard Lauren was writing a new novel and I read what it was going to be about, I was really looking forward to reading it. I was thrilled to receive a copy and eagerly started it, and was pleased with the read that I got!
Last Night at Chateau Marmont is a bit different to most celebrity/fame inspired stories you find in usual Chick Lit novels. For starters, it doesn’t paint ‘celebrity’ in the most inspiring light, giving a real and proper look into what fame can do to a couple and secondly, Brooke and Julian aren’t people you would expect to become celebrities, not Brooke anyway, and the culture shock she experiences when it turns out that she and Julian are becoming celebrities makes for fascinating reading, because it’s a fish out of water experience, as they both come to terms with the fact Julian has indeed made it as a musician after many many years of trying. I don’t know how much research Weisberger put into the novel, but she manages to write the Alters’ rise to fame very well.
Another surprising factor is that this book isn’t about finding love, as Julian and Brooke have been happily married for five years, so the book is more about the celebrity side of things rather than being focused on someone finding ‘The One’. That’s not to say Brooke and Julian don’t have troubles as a couple, because they do, even more so when Julian becomes a rock star and has to fly to LA regularly, leaving Brooke behind as she’s reluctant to quit her two jobs as she loves both of them. It certainly begins to put a strain on their marriage and then when some compromising photos appear, shot at the infamous Chateau Marmont, it looks as though it may all fall apart for the pair. I liked how their relationship was portrayed, that they did love each other, but that everything that was happening was pulling them in two separate directions. I wasn’t completely sure how their marriage would pan out, whether they’d be able to survive everything that happens to them, but I know I wanted them to pull through because, despite everything, Brooke and Julian seem perfect for each other.
I really, really liked Brooke. She’s very down-to-Earth and I loved the way she supported Julian without question, working two jobs just to make sure he could keep making his music, but what I liked about her most was that when Julian became famous, and suddenly she was thrust into the spotlight, she didn’t become a total airhead, she stayed true to who she was and she knew that the celebrity lifestyle wasn’t really her. I also really liked Julian, and I thought his success was well deserved. Yes, he has some questionable moments, in particular later on in the novel, but on the whole he seemed decent enough. Brooke’s friends Nola and Neha were also great characters, I particularly loved Nola and her man-loving ways, she was very funny with it. I didn’t particularly like all of the people who are attached to Julian once he gets his big break, his manager Leo is a bit of an idiot and Samara, his publicist, isn’t particularly likeable. There aren’t many other characters, bar Brooke and Julian’s parents as well as Brooke’s brother and all were fairly OK characters, although I thought Julian’s parents were a nightmare and I was always a bit wary of Michelle, Brooke’s brother Randy’s girlfriend.
Last Night at Chateau Marmont is written really well by Weisberger, and I can’t understand why everyone says she’s a one-book-pony (if you will) and can’t write for toffee because I found the book absorbing and I could barely put the book down once I got into it. The only qualms I had about the novel was the use of the word “baby” which always drives me bananas when used as a term of endearment and the fact that when articles begin appearing in Last Night (a celebrity magazine) quoted from “sources close to Brooke and Julian”, we don’t actually find out who that was. I have an idea, but there’s no real confirmation. Apart from that qualm, I felt everything was tied up nicely and I thought the ending was fantastic. I’m definitely going to be reading Lauren’s other novels as she clearly can write a good story and I thoroughly enjoyed Last Night at Chateau Marmont and would recommend it to anyone looking for an easy way to spend an afternoon or evening.