What happens when you toss tradition out the window and really start living for yourself?Venus Johnston has a great job, a beautiful home, and a loving live-in boyfriend named Clint, who happens to be a drop-dead gorgeous doctor. She has a weekly beauty-parlor date with Tina, who keeps Venus's long, processed hair slick and straight. Ever since childhood, the tedious hours in the salon and the harsh, burning chemicals have grated on Venus, and increasingly she dreams of cutting off her beautiful "good" hair. When her boyfriend keeps balking at commitment, and the thought of another hour at the salon is just too much, Venus decides to give it up -- all of it. She trades in the long hair for a dramatically short, natural cut and sends Clint packing. It's a bold declaration of independence -- and one that has effects she never could have imagined. Reactions from friends and coworkers range from concern to contempt to outright condemnation. When Clint moves on and starts dating a voluptuous, long-haired beauty, Venus is forced to question what she really wants out of life. With wit, resilience, and a lot of determination, she finally learns what true happiness is . . . on her own terms.In the bestselling style of Eric Jerome Dickey, Bebe Moore Campbell, and Terry McMillan, Nappily Ever After captures the hopes, dreams, and conflicts of the contemporary African-American woman. It's a delicious story told with style, savvy, and humor -- a novel that marks the debut of a fresh new voice in fiction.
Series
7 primary booksNappily is a 7-book series with 7 primary works first released in 2000 with contributions by Trisha R. Thomas.
Reviews with the most likes.
bookclub4m chick lit romance genre.
Ok this ended up being satisfying. I loved how the author tackles the effects of warped beauty standards on black women (and especially their hair!) And of community expectations on both men + women. Both main characters go through a personal evolution during the book to get to their HEA. I get weirded out sometimes when there is a heavy emphasis on marriage as the marker of a successful relationship/woman/life. But there is so much casual homophobic rhetoric from everyone!!! However it takes place in the late 90s so of a time maybe but ho Nelly - I just wanted to smack all the characters upside the head.