Available:*
Library | Call Number | Status |
---|---|---|
Searching... Hardwood Creek Library (Forest Lake) | FICTION NEL | Searching... Unknown |
Searching... R.H. Stafford Library (Woodbury) | FICTION NEL | Searching... Unknown |
Bound With These Titles
On Order
Summary
Summary
"Sister Jill isn't just a foot soldier in what passes for war between the sexes. She's our commander-in-chief and follow we must."
--Pearl Cleage, New York Times bestselling author of What Looks Like Crazy On An Ordinary Day
Author Notes
Jill Nelson is an associate professor of journalism at the City College of New York & has written for the "New York Times Book Review" among other publications.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (3)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Now playing: the second verse of Nelson's wildly popular debut (Sexual Healing), with Marvin Gaye again providing the thematic backup for the over-the-top sexual shenanigans and ribald politics embraced by the proprietors of A Sister's Spa. This time out, Yale-educated lawyer LaShaWanda P. Marshall, and fellow spa founders Lydia Beaucoup and Acey Allen recreate their successful unorthodox Reno, Nev., spa on a boat moored off Martha's Vineyard. As Wanda puts it: "We were offering women multiorgasmic sex without the complications or mating, dating, or a relationship, and they were hungry for it," In Martha's Vineyard, the crew appeals to the established black community to open its arms to the new business while battling a mobster trying to shake them down, a racist madman in their midst and a president who aims to outlaw anything but sex-for-procreation with a bill called "No Child, No Behind." It's a dopey mix of overbroad sexual and racial politics, but the sisters still manage to sizzle-and elicit smiles with their insatiable appetites for love, social justice and the sex trade. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Kirkus Review
The crew from Sexual Healing (2005) is back, and this time they're opening a sex spa for women off the coast of Martha's Vineyard. After winning a $3 million lawsuit against her former Wall Street employers, plus-sized spitfire LaShaWanda P. Marshall opts to use her well-earned lucre to give back to the community by launching an East Coast spinoff of A Sister's Spa. Wanda is CFO of America's first and only brothel for women in Reno, Nev., and her first hurdle is convincing partners Lydia and Acey that a new branch will fly. The location is key. Reasoning that women of the black elite who summer in Martha's Vineyard would pay handsomely for the discreet services offered by their team of studs, handpicked by human-resources director Odell, Wanda proposes they set up shop on a luxury yacht three miles from the coast of Massachusetts. (This gets around the whole prostitution-is-illegal-in-most-states thing.) In preparation for the Floating Spa's Memorial Day opening, Lydia and Wanda head east to train new talent and build clientele. That leaves Odell and the comparatively prim Acey alone in Nevada to sort out their feelings for each other. The new spa is an instant hit, thanks in part to Lydia's high-society godmother Ma Nicola, who has deep roots in the Martha's Vineyard community, and to its star employee Jamal, an enterprising young immigrant from Mombasa dubbed "Afrodonis" by Lydia. But there is always someone who wants to spoil the party, and in this case the killjoys include a mobster who wants a piece of the action and a shifty young white sex worker named Tollhouse. Also threatening everyone's good time is the conservative president, whose "No Child, No Behind" policy, aimed at eliminating nonprocreational sex, is sure to put a damper on both business and pleasure. With its sex-positive message and unapologetic emphasis on female enjoyment, Nelson's latest makes for a zingy beach read, even if the political satire is a bit tone deaf. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Review
Dreamed up and opened in Nelson's Essence best seller, Sexual Healing, A Sister's Spa is an unconventional business where professional women clients can get a relaxing facial, a massage, reflexology, and a multiorgasmic sexual experience from men trained to please women. Located in Reno, this outrageously successful spa is the brainchild of a group of shrewd friends: Lydia Beaucoup, Acey Allen, and LaShaWanda P. Marshall. After winning a three-million-dollar settlement, LaShaWanda and her friends open a franchise on a yacht off the shores of Martha's Vineyard. But the new franchise comes with new challenges. The federal government is trying to ban sex between unmarried people, the mob wants a cut of the spa's profits, and the yacht becomes the setting for a potential political coup. VERDICT Nelson takes her fans on a sexual fantasy showing that women can be in control and mix business with pleasure. Readers of Zane, Mary B. Morrison, and Eric Jerome Dickey will enjoy Nelson's funny, voluptuous, and erotic tale.-Carol Johnson, Cleveland P.L. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.