Hey ladies!

the story of 8 best friends, 1 year, and way, way too many emails

No cover

Michelle Markowitz: Hey ladies! (2018)

272 pages

English language

Published Feb. 27, 2018

ISBN:
978-1-4197-2913-3
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OCLC Number:
1000583025

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3 stars (2 reviews)

Based on the column of the same name that appeared in The Toast, Hey Ladies! is a laugh-out-loud read that follows a fictitious group of eight 20-and-30-something female friends for one year of holidays, summer house rentals, dates, brunches, breakups, and, of course, the planning of a disastrous wedding. This instantly relatable story is told entirely through emails, texts, DMs, and every other form of communication known to man.The women in the book are stand-ins for annoying friends that we all have. There's Nicole, who's always broke and tries to pay for things in Forever21 gift cards. There's Katie, the self-important budding journalist, who thinks a retweet and a byline are the same thing. And there's Jen, the DIY suburban bride-to-be. With a perfectly pitched sardonic tone, Hey Ladies! will have you cringing and laughing as you recognize your own friends, and even yourself.

3 editions

Review of 'Hey ladies!' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

The moment I fell in love with The Toast as my internet home started with the words "Hey Ladies."
The moment that I had second thoughts about going into pediatrics also started with "Hey Ladies!" In fact, in my previous life as a computer scientist, no one would ever have referred to a professional group as "ladies," for gender reasons alone. But, as a senior medical student, all of my peers considering pediatrics were women, as was the altogether too cheery chief resident standing in front of us, gathering our professional attention with her false-friendly greeting: "hey, ladies!"

And, yeah, honestly, I love being a pediatrician, but my professional life is one where gender performance is scrupulously policed, and semi-social professional interactions are full of gender declarations, passive aggressive behavior and subtle status cues. So the way that Markowitz and Moss really capture a way in which women of a …

avatar for libraryfairyjess

rated it

2 stars

Subjects

  • Social networks
  • Interpersonal communication
  • Electronic mail messages
  • Women
  • Friendship
  • Fiction