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Despite his new-found fame on ITV 5's latest soap, womaniser Dan Davis is failing to score with the ladies. Every time. And he can't understand why. All is revealed when Dan and his friend Ed Middleton come across a mysterious website - slateyourdate.com - where women rate their experiences of their exes, and where Dan is shocked to learn that long after he's given them one, his ex-girlfriends are giving him one - one out of ten, that is. Faced with the prospect of a lifetime of singledom, Dan needs to crack the code of a website that's strictly women only to find out where he's been going wrong. Then he must track down his many exes in order to put things right. Along the way, Dan discovers he has much to learn about himself. Particularly when he meets up again with Polly - and realizes he wants her back. Can Dan convince his former love he's changed? Can Ed convince Dan he needs to change in the first place? Can the two friends use their new-found knowledge to help other men in the same boat?
Simon & Schuster (United States) | |
2008 | |
9781847390684 | |
Paperback - 416 Pages |

Average rating (3 reviews)
Well that's 2 days I'll never get back
mark1000000 | 23/02/2009 | See all mark1000000's reviews (1) »
Why do they keep publishing Matt Dunn books. This truely is the worst book I have ever read. From start to finish it forces it's reading to want to commit murder (of Matt Dunn). The one dimensional characters and the dull, predictable plot go in some way to irritate. The thing that really makes this so awful is the "funny" banter between the two main characters. If this is supposed to reflect something of Mr Dunn, they I really do feel sorry for him. These two characters are so mind numbingly stupid, not to mention inconsistent - one of them (and they swap frequently) plays the fool, so that Dunn can get his oh so pointless message across. The reviews this book has received are largely from Women's magazines, some claiming that Dunn is some sort of genius for "fessing up" on what men really think. Let me make this perfectly clear. If this is what Dunn thinks, he should be avoided at all costs.
Boring & predictable
simestel3581 | 13/01/2009 | See all simestel3581's reviews (23) »
Having read The Ex -Boyfriends Handbook I was looking forward to reading the sequel - however was sadly dissapionted.
I found the book to have very little storyline/plot and that a lot of chapers repeated themselves. The outcome of the story was also very predictable in my opinion and I only read to the end on the principle that I had paid for the book.
I had high expections of this novel and I regret to say it didn't come close.
A real page turner and very, very funny..
JonWeedon | 15/12/2008 | See all JonWeedon's reviews (2) »


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