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@Expectations
  

@Expectations (Mass Market Paperback)

by Kit Reed (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

Love-starved Internet trawlers, beware, warns this provocative and amusing cautionary tale about chat-room romances by versatile fiction writer Reed. Stuck in sleepy Brevert, S.C., with her husband, Lt. Col. Charlie Wilder, USMC, and two hostile stepkids, Jenny Wilder becomes obsessed with life online at the imaginary offshore island StElene, "a sprawling resort... where Jenny can shed her problems and walk free." She can also shed her name (online she's Zan) and her persona as responsible wife and careerwoman. Days, Jenny is a therapist, bored by her neurotic Southern patients and homesick for her loft on lower Broadway. Nights, she's at StElene, where "you are what you type" and where she and "Reverby" are in love. They fraternize with friends in the ballroom, but disdain enemies like "Mireya," "Rev's" ex-lover, and "Azeath," a self-styled demonic figure; both try to help "Lark," a 19-year-old college dropout whose parents want to evict him. Every night, they retreat to the Dak Bungalow, their private place, where they make love by what "Reverby" calls "performative utterance." Whereas Jenny's Charlie is "relentlessly physical," "Reverby" knows "how to make love to her soul." Long nights in virtual reality begin to affect Jenny's daytime existence; her professional partner notes her distraction and warns her about the dangers of Internet obsession. But Jenny no longer sees the line between fantasy and reality. Suddenly, "Reverby" disappears from StElene and Jenny, accompanied by the desperate "Lark," goes in search of him, embarking on a disastrous real-life journey. Reed makes Jenny's slide into an online world seem nearly plausible in this up-to-the-minute alternative love story. (Sept.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Kirkus Reviews

The always original Reed (Seven for the Apocalypse, 1999, etc.) perceptively probes that point where reality and the virtual converge as a young married professional woman finds herself more alive and in love when she meets her anonymous lover online each night.Psychologist Jennie Wilder is newly married to Marine colonel Charlie, a widower with two children. Life in the southern town near his base is boring to a New Yorker like Jennie, who's also having problems with the kids. To pass the hours of Charlie's frequent absences, she surfs the Web, where one night she discovers the fantasy Island of StElene. Entranced with the clever talk about politics, sex, and anything else that engages the anonymous guests, Jenny is soon hooked, and becomes an authorized guest herself under the name Zan. As an only child, Jenny escaped reality by reading; now she finds visiting StElene like going to live in a richly imagined book. StElene's, she realizes, is a place where "you are what you type," and people assume identities that hide the realities of their often pathetic lives. Lark, a troubled teenage loner whose real name is Hubert, is eloquent and gregarious; dowdy Florence becomes sexy warrior woman Mireya; and her online lover is gorgeous hunk Azeath, not Vinnie, a convicted murderer. Jenny soon falls in love with sympathetic Reverdy, the godlike creator of new scenarios and effects. As time passes, she begins to live for her nights online, and soon realizes she is as much in love with her virtual prince as with her real husband. When reality, drab and problematic, threatens her e-idyll, Jenny, with Lark in tow, sets off to find the real but elusive Reverdy, with regrettably predictable results. A generally engaging tale that demonstrates-without preaching-the pitfalls of virtual romance in a place where no one can hurt you and everybody turns out to be somebody. -- Copyright © 2000 Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
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2 star:    (0)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Life and love on the internet, Mar 3 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: @Expectations: A Novel (Paperback)
Sometimes love is more powerful when you can't see your beloved. This smart novel about an online love affair is intense!
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1.0 out of 5 stars Half a star?, Jun 14 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: @Expectations: A Novel (Paperback)
This is a terrible book. The writing is melodramatic, the situations contrived, and the characters, especially the protagonist, repellant.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Book about loneliness and unrealistic expectations, Sep 20 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: @Expectations (Hardcover)
I liked the book very much. My only comment is that sometimes the online dialogs are too lenghtly. I don't think the book is only about love in the modern era. It is about loneliness. misunderstanding and attempt to hide from the life's problems. How often did we find ourselves imagining that we are someone else from a book or a movie. Now we can even play we are somebody else. Unfortunately, when we do that, we may go too far away and not be able to deal with real life. It is not just Jenny/Zan. It is also Lark and other people. All are unhappy and running away from their problems instead of trying to solve them. This novel is a good caution against unrealistic expectations.
I was a little disappointed by the deepness of the characters. I thought that Jenny does surprisingly little to help herself and her step children - and she is a therapist! But maybe she does not want any more therapy in real life!
I liked Lark's character. He is a warning to all parents about how lonely our children can be.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Cyber-love???
This is a wonderful escape from the typical romance novel. Jenny Wilder reinvents herself in a mystical chat room as Zan. Read more
Published on May 28 2002 by Karen Colvin

1.0 out of 5 stars modern fable, disappointingly told
Kit Reed's "@expectations" did not live up to my expectations of what she could do with the story of a young woman who falls into an online relationship, despite a new... Read more
Published on Jan 17 2002 by Karen Sampson Hudson

3.0 out of 5 stars Lighten up ...it's only a game!
This book is based on the concept of "Performative utterance" or "What we say...is". Read more
Published on Dec 24 2000 by Denise Bentley

4.0 out of 5 stars What Expectation To Expect
What a title! One can truely summarize the entire book by the title. Each of the characters in the book has expectations about other characters. Read more
Published on Dec 20 2000 by ajtmw

5.0 out of 5 stars Virtual Reality?
What was I expecting from this book? To be honest, I expected a modern romance about two people falling in love in cyberspace. Read more
Published on Dec 12 2000 by CoffeeGurl

4.0 out of 5 stars For Anyone Who thought love existed in Cyberspace
This book blew me away. Jenny is leading a double life, one as a not so well adjusted pyschotherapist, stepmom, and wife. Read more
Published on Nov 15 2000 by Booklover

5.0 out of 5 stars Internet users are going to have fun with this one
Jenny knows she loves her husband, Lieutenant Colonel Charlie Wilder, but has problems relating with his two children, Rusty and Patsy, from his first marriage. Read more
Published on Aug 29 2000 by Harriet Klausner

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