Rebooting in Beverly Hills

A Wise and Wild Path for Navigating the Dating World

Reviews about Marcy Miller’s
Rebooting in Beverly Hills

Here’s what readers are saying about Marcy Miller’s Rebooting in Beverly Hills: A Wise and Wild Path for Navigating the Dating World:

 


 

“From a smart, rich, attractive, and very likeable woman living in the ultra-glamorous world of Beverly Hills comes Rebooting in Beverly Hills, a quick and compelling book that sets forth, in side-splittingly funny fashion, Marcy Miller’s many adventures as she struggles to re-enter the dating world after a disastrous divorce from an adulterous husband. Marcy’s a little saucy and it’s easy to empathize with her search for love. The book wasn’t written for me, or any other man, but I loved it, and most men will, too, I bet.”
—Ed Feldman, producer of Witness, The Truman Show, 101 Dalmations, etc.

 


 

“Such a stitch!”
—Paula Schneider, CEO, big strike LLC, a portfolio company of the Gores Group

 


 

“For lots of good reasons, a guilty pleasure–with a capital ‘P.’”
—Amy Elias, President, Profiles, Inc. (a public relations firm)

 


 

“Not many women can pull off a memoir that is, at the same time, so revealing, so funny, and so helpful. Bravo!”
—Jennifer Dynof, President, LoweProfile (Rob Lowe’s production company)

 


 

“People know me as a twenty-something, and not exactly this book’s target audience, but I learned so much in reading Rebooting. I also laughed a ton. Pardon the pun, but it’s one for the ages–different ones, that is.”
—Amy Gregg, jewelry company executive

 


 

“This book is a great read–compelling, engaging, racy, funny, entertaining, acerbic, so honest, revealing, and deeply human. By the end, it’s quite hopeful because ultimately it’s a story about recreating/rebuilding one’s life because of one’s will, one’s determination, one’s smarts, one’s great friendships, one’s sense of humor, one’s strength, and one’s ability to trust again. The hope that is written about at the beginning of the book as distorting decision-making actually reappears by the end in the very fact of Marcy’s life. We the readers are left hopeful that we can indeed reboot our lives, as messy and complicated and painful as it may be. This is a book that is going to help people.”
—Irwin Kula, Rabbi, author of Yearnings: Embracing the Sacred Messiness of Life (one of the 10 best spiritual books of 2006); and a regular Guest on NBC’s “Today Show”