Reviews

The Intern by Gabrielle Tozer

bookswithbre's review

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4.0

Love, love, LOVE! The Intern was such a cute, lighthearted and funny read. The characters were well-crafted and I could relate to them, especially Josie. Her relationship with her sister was very fun to read about. Gabrielle Tozer is a skilled writer and weaving her own experiences into The Intern was a very smart move. I've just found out that the sequel, Faking It, is being released next month and I can't wait to get my hands on a copy!

fictionalkate's review

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4.0

The Intern is a fun contemporary novel featuring Josie, a first year journalism student about to start an internship at a fashion magazine. Wanting to be a serious newspaper writer and having no idea about the glossy world of magazines (I have a feeling Josie would consider herself about as glamorous as a garden gnome), Josie is out of her depth. But she's determined to succeed at her internship and not let down all the people who believe in her.

This book has been described as The Devil Wears Prada for the young adult set - and that's a great description. Josie is serious about her future as a journalist. She's top of her class at university and despite spending her days laundering outfits for fashion shoots isn't part of the plan, Josie is willing to pay her dues. Reading about Josie's adventures in the fashion industry was fantastic. She seems to have more than her share of embarrassing moments yet she doesn't let them get the best of her. Josie is intelligent and I loved her sense of humour.

As well as the magazine side of things, The Intern features realistic and interesting relationships. The ones between Josie and her professional colleagues at Sash magazine were fun to read about. Josie's bond with her sister Kat and her best friend Angel are fantastically down to earth and whilst both have their problems, they are realistic and loving. And then there's the romance! It's sweet and lovely. Josie's romantic life is full of embarrassing incidents (much like her professional life) but her relationship with a certain blue-eyed boy is one I loved reading about.

Over the course of the novel (and over the course of her internship), Josie really grows as a character. Spending time in the City with people who work in her dream industry, Josie goes from an unsure teenager to an adult who takes responsibility for her life. This is one of those coming of age novels in which the character's growth feels natural and right.

I loved reading The Intern. The magazine lifestyle, Josie's romantic adventures and the antics of everyone she meets along the way - this book is fun, heartfelt and one of my favourite contemporary reads of 2014 (definitely worth the half hour I spent trying to decide which colour cover I wanted to buy...). I could not be more excited that Gabrielle Tozer has written a sequel following Josie's adventures, Faking It, and it will be released next month.





Favourite quotes:

“Melons. The girls. Gazongas. I could rattle off every nickname in the world for my boobs – oops nearly forgot jubblies – but it didn’t change the fact they were small.”

"Everything I could see was soft, fluffy or cuddly. What was I supposed to do? Towel the guy into a coma?Shampoo him to death?"

"I was only one more embarrassing incident away from morphing into a rom-com character"

julia___reads's review

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2.0

I've never really enjoyed Australian literature and The Intern is no exception. There were parts in the middle which were bearable, at times even enjoyable, but I had to really push myself to get through the last 100 pages and actually finish the book. Definitely won't be going back for the sequel.

cityofstarlight_library's review

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3.0

3.5 STARS


REVIEW TO FOLLOW

pixelski's review

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3.0

Firstly, thanks to HarperCollins Australia for this review copy.

Review originally posted at Fiction in Fiction in Fiction

Simply put, if you love The Devil Wears Prada (the movie that is, I haven’t read the book) then you’ll love The Intern. I could draw so many parallels while reading The Intern, but despite the similarities, I could still enjoy The Intern as its own work of art.

University student Josie Browning dreams of being a newspaper journalist but instead gets landed working at high profile fashion magazine Sash. The poor girl is an absolute walking disaster – I’m actually not sure it’s possible for someone in real life to be this clumsy? I couldn’t relate to all her embarrassing situations as a result of this, I mean I consider myself a klutz but Josie was a different story. That didn’t stop my face from heating up in humiliation on behalf of Josie while reading. I think, in part, some of her clumsiness could be attributed to her unease and lack of self-confidence at the beginning of the book. She makes SO many mistakes throughout, but my high school maths teacher once said “I make mistakes every day, but I never make the same mistake twice”. I loved that about Josie – despite all the shit she managed to get herself into, she would always pick herself up and get on with life and make the most out of things.

I loved the insight into life working at a fashion magazine. I know Tozer’s worked at a few magazines herself so I could tell a lot of this stuff was legit. A lot of it seemed ridiculous to be honest – making interns do menial tasks, fetch coffee and be the errand girl (I guess someone’s got to do it, but really does it have to be the person in university who’s meant to be getting real hands on experience that’s meant to contribute to their degree?). As someone who’s done 3 internships, I’ve been told if I wasn’t given real work after a certain point I should speak up so Josie’s situation really made me flinch. But this is a different type of industry, one that admittedly has some shallow people but also required Josie to prove her worth. It was interesting to see the range of tasks she was faced with and how she tackled them.

There’s a pretty juicy scandal in the midst of this and I cringed at how the poor target got dragged through the mud throughout it all. This was my favourite part of the book – the way it was handled, the aftermath and what Josie and others took from this horrid situation. There was no sugar-coating the ordeal, only to get through it, learn and move on. And don’t make the same mistake twice.

Let’s not forget the really sweet romance in this. There’s an absolutely swoon-worthy boy and a bunch of really icky ones. Shant talk much more about this because you should read and find out.

My biggest issue with The Intern was the writing style. I felt that it was a bit over the top and because of that, it made the situations seem unrealistic so I couldn’t relate to some of the things that went on (aforementioned clumsiness). Don’t get me wrong, Tozer’s style is engaging and it’s definitely got the essence of someone who writes articles to draw the audience in but at times I would just pause in my scepticism.

Overall, I felt that Josie really matured by the end of the book and I can’t wait to see where Faking It takes her. This was a light read that’s very fun, swoony and I loved the fashion aspect.

_tabae's review against another edition

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4.0

Wirklich nette, chaotische Geschichte über Familie, Erwachsenwerden, Träume und den Umgang mit Problemen... oh und natürlich über die erste Liebe ;)

readaroundtherosie's review

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3.0

Rating: 3.5

I really enjoyed this book. It was fun, mostly light, and entertaining.

zohal99's review against another edition

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4.0

This was awesome! :) :D

I mean overall it was quite predictable and had a big 'Happily Ever After' ending, but who doesn't love that in a book every once in a while?

It was interesting seeing how aspects of the publishing industry work as the author of the book herself is a journalist, who has probably been through similar situations. (Although probably nowhere near as dramatic as the ones in this book)

Overall, I recommend this awesome read. You'll breeze through it no problem. :) :D

jessthebest123's review

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4.0

A good time

trisbooks's review against another edition

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3.0

Rating: 3.5 stars