Valley of the Dolls
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Valley of the Dolls

3.58 of 5 stars 3.58  ·  rating details  ·  12,487 ratings  ·  1,171 reviews
Sex and drugs and shlock and more--Jacqueline Susann's addictively entertaining trash classic about three showbiz girls clawing their way to the top and hitting bottom in New York City has it all. Though it's inspired by Susann's experience as a mid-century Broadway starlet who came heartbreakingly close to making it, but did not, and despite its reputation as THE roman á ...more
Paperback, 448 pages
Published September 22nd 1997 by Grove/Atlantic, Inc. (first published 1961)
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(showing 1-30 of 17,120)
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Jessica
Jessica rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: lindsay lohan, britney spears, et al
If you haven't read this book, I suggest you quit dicking around on the internet and do absolutely whatever it takes to snag yourself a copy this instant. Granted it's probably not for everyone, but I gotta tell you, this is seriously among THE MOST VASTLY ENTERTAINING books I have ever read in my life.

Imagine you are lying in a silk-sheeted waterbed next to a vast swimming pool, smoking a ridiculously long cigarette, wearing an Italian bikini and extremely large, expensive hat, and ...more
Paul
I bought a copy for 10p at the Oxfam shop. I returned to my space age bachelor pad, switched on my lava lamp, reclined on my La-Z-Boy (late 1970s Magic Fingers model), mixed a bright puce cocktail made out of three parts flamingos and ten parts vermouth with amusing parasols stuffed in the tall tall glass, then I threw on that cd where some genius put modern beats to Gregorian chants, and with my ultramarine-dyed and topiaried poodle named Gregoire gazing raptly up at me I read up to page 100 an...more
Briynne
Well. I have conflicting opinions about this book. First, and most obviously, this was almost entirely meant to be a mental vacation after the insanity of planning and executing a wedding in 6 months. In that capacity, "The Valley of the Dolls" shone brilliantly. I was highly entertained by the book and the easy trashiness was somehow comforting, as it always is.

But I couldn't help actually reading the book whilst I was busy regaining balance in my chi or whatever. I...more
Megan
I read this in high school... goodness knows why. I didn't particularly enjoy it, though it does keep moving along and kind of holds you in town hoping that eventually things will go right for the characters or that they will have some insight into their lives and take a little responsibility or face up and change eventually... but it never happens. This has got to be one of the most depressing books I've ever read. Unfortunately I can't even really say it presents women in a bad light or unfair...more
sayDIE
sayDIE rated it 4 of 5 stars
i remember the first time i read valley of the dolls. i picked it up, instantly hated it, and then read it nonstop for a series of days. i hated that neelie was such a bitch, and that anne could be so haughty. and that other chick.. yeah, you know the one. the porn one who went to spain or whatever. anyway. in the entire course of the book i found myself loving the girls, hating them, feeling mortified when they made a scene in public, and ultimately, hurting with them when they fell from their ...more
Robin
Robin rated it 1 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: insomniacs, masochists, glamour pusses
Back cover proclaimed that it was brilliant. Was in fact rubbish. Lyon Burke is basically a cardboard cutout, yet apparently everyone's in love with him. What. The narrative is bad enough to be bad, but not bad enough to be funny. You spend pretty much the first half of the book wondering when something actually interesting is going to happen, and then when it does, you've lost any and all interest in the people that things are happening to. The only character I liked was Helen. On and on and on...more
Jessica
I've read this book at least three times. I must have read it at a very impressionable age (the first time), because it has burned itself in my memory. I love it; and every other time I've read it, it's been a guilty pleasure for me - just like reading US Weekly or InTouch magazine. Its a wondrous piece of thinly veiled fiction, chronicling the glamorous lives of three up-and-coming New York/Hollywood ladies. "Sparkle, Neely! Sparkle!" Jacqueline Susann is my heroine.

Sally
What an amazing book - I couldn't put it down. I had always envisaged this as old-school chick lit (and had avoided it until Virago released their delightful 30th Anniversary covers and I had to buy it for that) but it really isn't - it is a scathing attack on how women are used and abused by the entertainment media and spat right back out again while men are revered and protected. It is certainly bleak but the way the book is written with such clinical passion (yes I know - an oxymoron but apt)...more
Mitch
Mitch rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: People who like the bad movie adaptation
This book is BAD! Which is why I love it so much. Susann had no idea how to write a book.

Susann's shallowness and immaturity (you get the impression a 14-year-old wrote this) is rampant throughout the book. No one has real feelings. People get married as business contracts. All men cheat; women never do. Blonds are icy and cold. Brunettes are smart and nurturing, and only women with glossy blue-black hair are sexy and passionate (Susann's hair was black).

Her pacing in t...more
Alina
Enter endless debauchery! I can see why people put up such a stink about Valley Of The Dolls when it was published. The book makes me happy to not have fame.

As an example of roman à clef, friends close to the author suspected that Susann wrote this book based her own experience, Ethel Merman, Judy Garland, Carol Landis, JFK, Monroe, Dean Martin etc. You couldn't make this stuff up if you tried. If you look up the real biographies, there are many parallels to the book.

...more
Xysea
Oh, this book was awful! It's been years since I've read it - it was when I was going through this phase where I read truly trashy novels just because...Judith Krantz, Joan Collins, Lawrence Sanders, Sidney Sheldon, Danielle Steele, et al.

The plot, the characters, the drugs, the sex! The only way it makes sense is to look at it as a parody of the culture at the time - but this book is *entirely* serious!

They made a dreadful movie out of it, too. It may be so bad its on...more
Nena
This is a good book, simple, easy, and nostalgic. It was emotionally difficult to read sometimes because I knew what was going to happen to Neely and Jennifer (I know an awful lot about Judy Garland and Marilyn Monroe), but I hoped for a happy ending with Anne. Didn't get it. So, I read the entire book to find out that this isn't a book I would have wanted to read, simply because I don't care for stories where nothing good ever happens. But it was well done. One read was enough.
Ogwen
It must've been the naughtiest thing around when it was published in the mid 1960s, and surprisingly, Valley of the Dolls has held up well. The cautionary tale of three girls' attempts at Hollywood success, Valley was easy to read. The writing was conversational, the plot was juicy and the characters were likeable (in the beginning, anyway). I found myself getting lost in this book and actively wanting to read it, which is more than I can say for some books.
However, it was much, much too ...more
Alison
Alison rated it 5 of 5 stars
Recommended to Alison by: probably my Mom
Shelves: lady-lit
Those who know me will recognize the startling similarities between my life and one of the main characters - she's a small town girl who moves to NYC without knowing anyone here. She lands the first job she interviews for and even stays at the same women's hotel I stayed at when I first moved here. But then the book and my life take a drastic split when she becomes a famous hairspray model and pill popper and I work in advertising and only take prescription medicine prescribed by my doctor.
Amanda
Goodness, this is a DEPRESSING book. Just... gah.

But it's great. I mean, the writing is sharp and easy to read, but not overly simplistic. It did bother me that there were so many slurs-- I spent half the thing cringing-- but I guess it's authentic for the time period and the way the characters would have spoken. I feel like this is more complex than a lot of novels, because it really does go into the inner lives of the three leads, and they really are all shades of grey-- with J...more
Lisa
Pills 101 – Valley of the Dolls by Jacqueline Susann

Valley of the Dolls by Jacqueline Susann is described as a cult classic that boasts having sold more than 30 million copies world-wide. It was first published in 1966 and became an instant success. Jacqueline Susann became the first female author to sell such quantities of her novels, helping to pave the way for future female fiction writers, especially in the genre of chic-lit.

What are dolls: red or black; capsules or ...more
Harmonybites
Harmonybites rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: Smarth Bitches Who Love Trashy Books
Recommended to Harmonybites by: The Complete Idiot's Guie to the Ultimate Reading List
James T. Kirk: You'll find it in all the literature of the period.

Spock: For example?

James T. Kirk: Oh, the neglected works of Jacqueline Susann, the novels of Harold Robbins....

Spock: Ah... The giants.

--Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home


Actually, although I blush a bit to admit it, I really relished reading Valley of the Dolls--which I basically gobbled down in one sitting--all 400 odd pages. Trash it may be, it's good trash--a compulsively readable,...more
Jamie
Jamie rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommends it for: anyone who reads the first chapter and can't stop reading. you might as well finish.
I love how whenever a seriously addictive book becomes a bestseller, all the book snobs get in line to tell you how much it sucks. Even the back cover classifies this book as a guilty pleasure.

Actually, as far as chick-lit goes, Valley of the Dolls is pretty much the gold standard. It starts with 3 very promising girls trying to make it in post-war New York and follows them as they spiral out of control and their lives become total train wrecks. It's anything but boring.

...more
Rebekah
Having just finished Valley of the Dolls by Jacqueline Susann I really just want to cry. No character ends with a positive note. They get their dream and then find out it is sour and poison.
Set in the 50's through the 70's the women fight their situation fight for the right to have love, and finally find that the fight leaves them emotionally destroyed in a male dominated world. Arguing that women need emotional fulfillment more than a man and playing on the double cross that young women ...more
Zed
I heard about this phenomenally popular book years ago. I didn't know what it was about, but the title intrigued me, so I was delighted to find a copy in a second hand shop.

It turns out to be the tale of three young American women who enter the entertainment business in the mid-40s, only to be plagued by drug addiction and misery. Though they suffer at the hands of the industry and time, one has limited sympathy for them. Julie Burchill writes an irritatingly sneery introduction, cri...more
D1wata
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Laala Alghata
“I’ve learned something — guys will leave you, your looks will go, your kids will grow up and everything you thought was great will go sour. All you can really count on is yourself and your talent,” Jacqueline Susann, Valley of the Dolls

As much as I love books and reading, I think books that shake you to your core don’t come by very often. I’m also of the opinion that they’re more likely to happen to you in your youth. A lot of my favourites, things that truly shook me, were read when ...more
Lisa
I have read this book several times and seen the movie, so I'm very familiar with the story line: three young women in New York City in the 1940s through the 1960s, living the fabulous life as famous singers, actresses and models. The title of the book, of course, refers to the fact that even when you "have it all," you don't--and all three end up getting hooked on pills to help them sleep, lose weight and have energy. It's not an earthshaking piece of important literature, but it is a...more
Sammi
I bought this book with some money I got given for my birthday a few years back, it caught my eye - partly because of the new pretty hardback edition. So I picked it up, I read the blurb on a different edition and thought it sounded pretty good - even though its nothing like the books I usually would pick out to read myself. Anyway I bought it and when I went to read it I got to page 16 and put it away. I hated it. Its been a few years since then and I picked it up again because it annoys me whe...more
Lainy
LOVED IT! Introducing Anne and her humble beginnings and the blossoming friendship between herself and the starlets Neely and Jennifer. The story goes off pretty much in each chapter in depths into each character and their lives to present. We start off with fairly ordinary girls, each trying to get what they want out of life and their trials and experiences getting there.

Then introducing the dolls and how they play a part in each characters life.

I initially liked Anne, Nee...more
Marie Astor
As they say, this one is an oldie, but goodie. Long before Sex and the City or Bridget Jones Diary topped the best seller lists, Jacqueline Susann wrote Valley of the Dolls. Sure, the book received plenty of criticism when it was first published, but the facts speak for themselves: millions of copies have been sold and the book is still being read today.

The novel follows the lives of three friends: Anne, Neely and Jennifer as they search for fortune and love in New York, but what make...more
Lisa
Lisa rated it 3 of 5 stars
Ok, this book is soooooooooooooooooooo bad, it's actually pretty awesome, but should be re-titled Valley of the Dumb Bitches. The language is so not PC and everyone gets screwed, but they pretty much ask for it.

Written in the 60's about women in post WWII NYC entertainment industry, it doesn't hold up after 40 years but is like being in a train wreck you can't put down.

Anne Welles- From boring New England, leaves behind the boring small town with the loveless mother and bori...more
Samantha
HMMM. Ok. This isn't a very good book...but yet, it's tantalizing and really sucks you in so you honestly enjoy yourself while you're in the moment. When that moment passes (for me, it was about 2/3rds into the book), you just feel disgust, saddness and anger for every single character...but, you read on. In the end, no one really comes out on top, you feel a little depressed and slightly rage-filled since there are really no comeuppances for two jerk characters. And the main character, Ann...more
Laura Williams
I will call this book mindless fun even though it ended up being pretty depressing. I'm torn between this book being ridiculously anti-feminist (full of women who define themselves by the love of a man and are so pretty they always get what they want) or this book being a cautionary tale about the dangers of showbiz, drugs and poor judgement. However, I'm pretty sure it's a realistic child of the time: the 1960's. I at least had hope for Anne since she seemed to always keep it together, but even...more
Amanda
Amanda rated it 3 of 5 stars
Recommends it for: someone looking for a guilty pleasure or an easy read
Shelves: book-club, reviewed
When my book club chose this book my thoughts were "Great, some trashy old chick lit that I will barely be able to finish." I'm not going to say it was a good book, but I actually found myself getting interested and (gasp!) enjoying myself while I was reading it. It has no depth but it's an easy read and one of those books you just have to check out because it's a "classic", albeit a trashy one :)

The characters were not particularly likeable - Anne went back and ...more
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Jacqueline Susann was an American author known for her best-selling novels. Her most notable work was Valley of the Dolls, a book that broke sales records and spawned an Oscar nominated 1967 film and a short-lived TV series.
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