“A delicious treat for a sunny afternoon. Vivid, pacey, and very funny.”
— The Times (London)
“As hilarious as it is tear-jerking. A real insider’s comedy of New York.”
—Plum Sykes, author of Bergdorf Blondes and The Debutante Divorcée
“Thanks to Harrison's engaging voice... the urban newspaper setting is a zippy backdrop for the real-life chick lit drama.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Tabloid Love is an insider’s look at what life is really like in the big city. Harrison doesn’t shy away from the funny—but sometimes sad—truths.”
—Candace Bushnell, author of Sex and the City and Lipstick Jungle
“[Harrison] is gutsier and funnier than Bridget [Jones] but just as socially and fashionably inept. And she resolves to get to the bottom of why it’s so damn difficult to meet a good man in New York, with some truly laugh-out-loud twists.”
—Cosmo UK
“This memoir is… endearing, gossipy, and wicked, with just the right dashes of ironic self-deprecation and poignant longing.”
—BookPage
“A gutsy, engaging, and really charming debut. I was rooting for Bridget all the way!”
—Suzanne Schlosberg, author of The Curse of the Singles Table: A True Story of 1001 Nights Without Sex
“You don’t have to be twenty-nine to enjoy this story; you only have to remember what it was like, and that once you were young enough to think twenty-nine was old.”
—Linda Ellerbee, author of Take Big Bites: Adventures Around the World and Across the Table
“Tabloid Love is a girl-meets-boy-boy-boy-boy story that you’ll fall in love with.”
—The Bookworm
“Bridget Harrison is so much sexier, so much funnier and so much more fundamentally human than Bridget Jones that Helen Fielding ought to just pack up and go home.”
—Giles Coren, author of Winkler
“At 29, New York Post reporter Bridget Harrison lands a fab assignment to chronicle her quest for a mate. Alternately funny and poignant, her tale of match-ups gone terribly wrong reads like fiction….But it’s all true—which is what makes this dating diary the season’s must-have beach accessory.”
—Marie Claire
“Forget Sex and the City reruns. With her savvy single-girl insight, Bridget Harrison might just be the new Carrie Bradshaw.”
—COSMO
“Bridget Harrison divulges her insecurities, gaffes, and triumphs. Read her memoir, Tabloid Love, and you’ll not only root for her, you’ll wish she were your best friend.”
—Harper’s Bazaar
“Move over Bridget Jones! You too, Carrie Bradshaw! Make room for Bridget Harrison, a sassy British-born journalist in her 30s whose new memoir chronicles her naughty exploits and romantic blunders while working at the New York Post.”
—Star Magazine
“The best part about this story of the trials and tribulations of toiling at the New York Post, bouncing between the Big Apple and the Hamptons, and dating Manhattan’s finest (or most loathsome) men? It’s all true—the book is a memoir.”
—Gotham Magazine
“…A frank, funny memoir of dating in New York.”
—Glamour Magazine
“There’s a lot to love about Tabloid Love….Harrison combines both the juice of New York City dating and the meat of scrappy journalism.…unlike many frothy female memoirs, Harrison’s direct, tabloid style of writing pushes this story forward fast, making it an easy, perfect summer read.”
—Boston Herald
“A juicy journalistic tale of love and headlines…a provocative and charming book.”
—Kirkus Special Edition