Sex and the City

Sex and the City

3.08 of 5 stars 3.08  ·  rating details  ·  18,906 ratings  ·  1,091 reviews
Wildly funny, unexpectedly poignant, wickedly observant, Sex and the City blazes a glorious drunken cocktail through New York, as Candace Bushnell, gossip columnist par excellence, trips on her Manolo Blahnik kitten heels from the Baby Doll Lounge to the Bowery Bar. An Armistead Maupin for the real world, she has the gift of assembling a huge and irresistable cast of freak...more
Paperback, 256 pages
Published 2008 by Abacus (first published 1996)
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(showing 1-30 of 3,000)
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Allison
Ouch, ouch, my soul.

Please don't misunderstand. I like vanilla cupcakes top heavy with fluffy pink frosting as much as the next guy. That's why the show is a longstanding guilty pleasure of mine. The difference between the show and the book is that while acquisitive, status-obsessed party monsters with less depth than a paper cut comprise the bulk of the characters on the show as in the book, the show manages to flesh them out into comically fallible, three-dimensional human beings who, even if...more
Katie
I think I read this right after the show first started on HBO. The book is nowhere near as entertaining as the show...it doesn't have the 4-girlfriends-on-the-town approach that the show takes; instead, it just focuses on some caricature of a stupid New York-type that I hate: the ones who live here like it's LA with bad weather.

If I had read this before I watched any of the episodes, I never would have turned on the show.
Elizabeth
There are very few books I quit reading, even if I don't like them, because I am compelled with book guilt most of the time.

I did not make it through this. All I can say is the writers for the HBO series REALLY had some vision, because the show was about 4000 times better than the book : )
Raquel
This was a great TV show in its heyday. I have seen every episode numerous times and feel like lately when I rewatch an episode it hasn't quite stood the test of time, but that doesn't deny the fact that this was a great, ground-breaking show.

I was really excited to read this book, due to my love of the show. But it was so completely different from the show, the characters were so flat, the writing so poor that I rue the fact that I paid even the Target low price of like 3 bucks for this piece...more
Jill
Jul 09, 2007 Jill rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: no one
Shelves: yuck
This was ridiculous. It was incredibly self-indulgent and trite. It's incredible that someone read this collection of articles and said, "Hey! Let's turn this into a wildly funny, intelligent, and timely series that will win Emmys and Jill's Heart!" Avoid the book, rent the series.
Christy
This book is nothing like the show (which I adore!). I couldn't make it past 50 pages of this book: I was so bored. Candace Bushnell is so impressed with herself and that's pretty much what her books are about. There was no plot or substance to hold my interest.
Dawn
Jun 10, 2008 Dawn rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: No one in their right mind.
This book was highly disappointing. I watch and love the show (and I'm looking forward to the movie) so I thought the book would be a sure bet. Turns out, the writers for the show are so much more smart, clever, and interesting that Bushnell could ever be. The Sex and the City book was just full of ridiculous characters in their thirties trying to be young again by going out every night to the "hottest" bar, doing ridiculous amounts of drugs like that's the only way to be cool, and it was terrib...more
Elizabeth
After reading this book I've come to the following conclusion: When people say that they only have time for movies, not books, they need to read a different type of book.

Sex in the City (the book) took me about 2.5 hours to read, the same time as a longish movie and I learned about as much as I do from a chick flick. It's rather obvious when you think about it. A cheesy chick movie like How To Lose A Guy in 10 Days is neither deep nor revelatory, complicated or precise. Bushnell's work reminds m...more
Jackie
I don't understand the point of this book. On one hand, I liked the ending more than I liked the series finale of the show; on the other, all of the characters in the book were caricatures of the worst qualities in people, unsympathetic and kinda psychotic. The first half of the book (a series of vignettes) was a bit more fun than the second (Carrie and her ensuing mental break-down with Big). Carrie, of the show and of the book, sucks.
Alexandra
Book2moviechallenge 2012:
2/12: Buch zu einer TV Serie

Buch: 3 Sterne
Extrem zynisches Werk in dem in kurzen aneinandergereihten Geschichten das Wesen der paarungswilligen New Yorker Frauen und der dazugehörigen Junggesellen beleuchtet wird. Teilweise sehr wirr im im Aufbau, da der Rote Faden durch die vielen unterschiedlichen Personen und die mangelnde Kontinuität (bis auf Carrie und Big) fehlt. Am Ende ist man froh, dass das Buch vorbei ist, und hat gelernt, dass man nie in dieser Stadt leben u...more
Taneika (Flipping Through The Pages...)
More of my reviews can be found at Flipping Through the Pages!

I’m not a huge fan of bitch-lit, chick-lit, whatever you’d like to call it, however, I have almost always felt okay after reading. The exception to that is this book, I was simply disappointed. As you will discover, although I appreciate movies and appreciate the fact that creating a movie or TV show is a completely different art to a book, I still prefer reading the book over the TV show/movie. But this is the first exception I’ve co...more
☆Jessie☆  (Ageless Pages Reviews)
Read This Review & More Like It On My Blog!

As a fan of the ubiquitous, outrageous and beloved show, I had a desire to read the sourc material as I have always always enjoyed the book over the show/movie/puppet re-enaction. This is the very first time (that I can remember) where that is not the case: I'll take the show and even those two atrocious movies over this crapfest. What was a fun, frothy, sexy show with independent and strong women was a soul-crushing excursion into the minds of char...more
Karschtl
Ich hatte anfangs gedacht, dass das Buch quasi genauso wie die TV-Folgen sind. Dem ist aber nicht so, was ich zuerst etwas schade fand.
Auch die Charaktere entsprechen nicht den vier Hauptdarstellerinnen, im Grunde genommen gibt es hier gar keine 4 Hauptdarsteller. Es gibt zwar eine Journalistin Carrie, eine Samantha Jones und auch Miranda. Es gibt sogar den schwulen Stanford. Aber es gibt auch eine Menge anderer Leute, dafür nicht die Mädels-Clique in dem Sinne wie in der Serie beschrieben. Die...more
Nirac
Feb 20, 2008 Nirac rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: everyone
Shelves: chick-lit
I was really looking forward to read this book, since I'm a big fan of Sex and the City. At first I thought the book was a bit confusing. I had assumed that the characters; Carrie, Miranda, Samantha and Charlotte as a group of friends would be in focus, like in the TV-series. In the beginning I was therefore a bit disappointed. As I continued to read, my view changed. I really started to enjoy reading this book.
What I really liked about the book was that even though the characters and the situa...more
Lisse
I've seen quite a few of the Sex and the City episodes and enjoyed them a lot, so I thought it would be cool to see where it all started from. I have to be honest - I think the television show is so much better - more fleshed out characters, better dialogue, more likeable characters and just a lot more depth period.
It's hard for me to get too interested in a book that is so very on the surface, where you never really get to know much about the characters or even the setting they are inhabiting....more
Nicole
This is certainly different from the series - and it's not just the mounds of cocaine and pounds of marijuana consumed by the main characters.

The selling point of the series has always been the friendships between the four characters. In this book, on the other hand, it's every girl for herself. The women are never supportive, and are usually backstabbing. Carrie is even more of a mess than she ever was in the TV show. Everyone seems utterly miserable.

Also? Allegedly this is uproariously funny,...more
Micky
I read this when the movie came out. It was not what I expected. It lacked the close friendship that was featured on the show.
Jenn
I decided to try some fluff. I really didn't like this book. I've come to like the TV series because although it can be a bit raunchy or risque, it has the redeeming qualities of humor, introspection, and the value of friendship. This book was all over the place. I guess I thought it would be a series of columns, but it didn't seem that way to me. It also didn't seem to have any introspection at all. I realize it isn't a novel so I didn't expect it to be a book with linear form. The problem is t...more
Erika Damon
One of the rare cases in which I prefer the show to the book. The only character that was better in the book was Stanford. Who cares what one woman thinks about the mating rituals specific to New York City?

****Update****

It's been a few months after I've read this book and I've had time to stew about it and really think of how angry it made me. So, I have reduced my rating from two stars to one. Take that Bushnell and your crappy storyline that wasn't evident until the last 3rd of the book!
Robertisenberg
As much as I enjoyed the show, I never intended to read the book, until I discovered that it is classified as nonfiction. That revelation surprised me, and I was further intrigued to know it's a collection of essays. That, as Bushnell might say, sealed the deal.

But what a peculiar collection! The early chapters remind me of nothing so much as Tom Wolfe -- a seen-it-all journalist romanticizing the epic madness of her zeitgeist. This approach is so distinctly 90s that I both rolled my eyes and fe...more
Deniz
The only enjoyable thing about the book is that many of the chapters are adapted to the series, and if you've watched the series before reading the book (like me), you'll remember the episodes and play them in your head while you read the stories. Also, there are some less obvious nuances, like Carrie's mink coat, which is mentioned in the book twice and which she wears through the first season of the series.

You are let down by the book after only 2 pages. The author references Truman Capote's b...more
Amanda N.
I feel bad for Candace Bushnell. I wanted to like this book - I loved the shows and the movies. But while reading Sex and the City, I just kept thinking how sad her life is.

The Carrie we know from HBO is not the Carrie that Bushnell deemed her alter-ego. The Carrie from this book is sad all the time. She fills her days, which are mostly nights, with activities that she's too old for. And she alienates the one person who really wants to love her and take care of her.

That's right, this book deta...more
Sophia Sun
Nov 12, 2011 Sophia Sun rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: The not so dedicated SATC fan
Recommended to Sophia Sun by: Television
Not to discredit my parents, but I was the teen girl who was raised on SATC. My parents didn't want to suffer through uncomfortable discussions, but they did inform me if I did have sex I would get pregnant, the first time, for sure.

Liars.

Anyway, I discovered SATC way back when Carrie's wardrobe was just tube tops and jeans and not quite manolo and Viv Westwood. The show wasn't finessed yet, and hadn't quite found it's voice or audience. To me, it had the word "sex" in it and it wasn't dirty p...more
Scherry Siganporia
"Readers! If you pick this book to read...then treat it as a book to read. It is not a serial. Nor is this Chic Lit material. What it is is a very mature and advanced version of relationships, people, women, sexuality...what I enjoyed about this book was the way it was disconnected from emotions...but revealed emotions ultimately. Candace Bushnell has put in a lot of thought in developing a variety of characters from Mr Big to Mr Marvelous...her style is unique, imaginative yet with all the elem...more
Virginia
Well...

There was...

um...

-No/minimum sex involved
-None of the (more) lovable characters- come on, where was Smith and Harry?!
-Lack of chapter format; if I'm going to force myself to read something that monotonous, at least make me feel a little better with a few chapter '1's' and '2's', Candace!!

HOWEVER, it wasn't ALL bad:

-If there wasn't a Smith, at least we had Mr Big...
-There were a FEW laughs along the way(I won't go as far to say 'laugh out loud' but...), so it wasn't completely dreary, but...more
Olesya
OK, this book doesn't probably deserve even one star. Not from me, anyway. I know, I know - the book that inspired one of my favorite shows of all time is supposed to be completely different, a collection of column entries, a haphazard look at approximately a thousand characters' lives in the Big Apple, etc., etc., etc., blah, blah blah. As such, it might work for some. As such, it might be found funny by the most unsentimental and cynical audience. As for me, it just left me depressed. It left...more
Meg
Does my opinion count if I only read 20 pages?

YES.

I ONLY READ 20 PAGES OF THIS BOOK.

Seriously? This was a book? And some based the Sex and The City that I love and adore on it?! Seriously? SERIOUSLY?!?! Obviously my expectations were based on the show, but I am easy to please. Especially when it comes to girlie stuff...I am living vicariously through characters while I read, I'm the first to admit! But the style of writing was like nothing I've ever encountered. I'd like to think that this bo...more
(´*•.¸ღBexღ¸.•*´)
I seem to be one of the rare ones here, but I am a fan of the show who actually enjoyed this book. I decided to read it not because I thought there would be something new and exciting to behold, or because I was expecting a riveting, entrancing novel. Rather, because I was curious about the origins of the characters and plotlines in one of my favorite television series. Most of the stories from the first season of the tv show are lifted from this book. However, some of the characters are differe...more
Lindsay
The author of this book has a new show coming out based on her book Lipstick Jungle and I kept seeing ads for it and wanted to read it, but my sister had this book on her shelft so I read it instead. We've all seen the show, and if you haven't then you must live in a cave. The show is addicting, and so was reading this book. It's a quick read and I just wanted to read it non-stop, but being sick only aloud for a few chapters a night. There are things from this book that you recongize from the sh...more
Mariah
I picked this up at a rummage sale for some light pool-side reading while on vacation. Having watched and enjoyed the TV series, I was curious to see what the book was like. Bushnell's writing style took a little getting used to, but while I can't say it was a _great_ book, it was far better written and I enjoyed it more than I'd expected. Fans of the series should be forewarned that, other than the primary story topics(modelizers, toxic bachelors, etc.), the book is very, very different from th...more
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Sex and the City (Paperback)
Sex and the City (Paperback)
Sex and the City (Paperback)
Sex and the City (Paperback)
Sex and the City (Paperback)

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Candace Bushnell is the critically acclaimed, international best-selling novelist whose first book, Sex and the City, was the basis for the HBO hit series and subsequent blockbuster movie. Her fourth novel, Lipstick Jungle became a popular television series on NBC. Bushnell’s novels include Four Blondes (2000), Trading Up (2003), Lipstick Jungle (2005), One Fifth Avenue (2008) and The Carrie Diari...more
More about Candace Bushnell...
Lipstick Jungle The Carrie Diaries (The Carrie Diaries, #1) Four Blondes One Fifth Avenue Trading Up

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