This book was just awful! The author claims to be a psychologist but she seems to have way too many issues and not much insight into the arrangement which she is endeavouring to enter. Now I am no expert on the art of arranging a sugar daddy but I suspect that one needs to be reliable and all this woman does is mess potential "clients" about. She has an over inflated ego and is constantly telling the reader that she is irresistible to all men then she gets on her high horse about how men are not monogamous when she is enabling them to cheat. I do not know why I persisted until the end and when I was done I felt like I had wasted time I would never get back. I am sure there must be better books out there about the sugar daddy experience, as for this one I wouldn't recommend it to anyone. Sugarbabe both placates and surprises you. It makes you realize that no matter where you are in the world, the battle of the sexes seems to continue along the same lines. It's fun that her memoir is explicit so that you get a real sense of the inner secrets of her potential "Johns."Two surprises: 1) That she's almost hit cougarhood (she was 39 at the time and passed for 35) and 2) That even with the way she makes her clients feel, that she had so many problems with them, financially.
Interesting book, definitely the author has a different perspective on marriage and relationships.
—Chai
Thought it was interesting as the idea of advertising yourself as a sugarbabe is pretty out there.
—andrea
Gold just for the novelty factor.
—quasia