Divorce, Hollywood Style - In the Chick Lit Novel IMPOSSIBLY TONGUE-TIED, Fiction Is Just as Titillating as Fact

Released on = November 22, 2006, 8:18 am

Press Release Author = Josie Brown

Industry = Entertainment

Press Release Summary = Jen and Brad. Jessica and Nick. Reese and Ryan. And now
Britney and Kevin can be added to the long list of Hollywood's famous albeit failed
marriages. Why are the odds for wedded bliss so dismal in Tinseltown? Blame fame,
says Josie Brown, author of the glam-packed roman-a-clef IMPOSSIBLY TONGUE-TIED...

Press Release Body = Jen and Brad. Jessica and Nick. Reese and Ryan. And now Britney
and Kevin can be added to the long list of Hollywood's famous albeit failed
marriages. Why are the odds for wedded bliss so dismal in Tinseltown?

The blame begins with the fame, says Josie Brown, author of IMPOSSIBLY TONGUE-TIED
(Avon Trade Paperbacks; On Sale 11/21/06; $12.95), a glam-packed roman-a-clef of the
celebrated and infamous.

\"We look at these beautiful people, and we just assume that they were made for each
other; that they'll live happily ever after. But the burden of celebrity comes with
an enormous amount of stress which can crack up even the strongest relationship. Add
to that long stretches apart when one partner must be on location, and the romantic
temptations that pop up while working with other beautiful people, well, you can
just imagine how that kills the odds for a successful celebrity marriage."

A glance at the tabloids that fill local newsstands bear this out. Bold headlines
shout out the latest legal maneuvers of divorce-bound celebrities, proof positive
that the public is just as curious about the break-ups of the rich and famous as the
star-studded weddings that preceded them.

As an entertainment feature writer, Brown has seen such dangerous celebrity liaisons
first hand. Though she changes the names to protect the infamous, the plots of her
books, including the popular TRUE HOLLYWOOD LIES, revolve around such naughty
antics.

In IMPOSSIBLY TONGUE-TIED, Brown's heroine, Nina Harte, and her husband, Nathan,
come to Hollywood with the hope of finding stardom. But things hardly go as planned.
The best acting job Nathan lands is as a costume character at Disneyland, while Nina
works at a gourmet grocery. When she discovers she is pregnant, she takes a second,
somewhat more interesting phone sex operator position on the side. Embarrassing as
it may be, there are bills to pay, and Nina, who is typically shy with people she
doesn't know, discovers the she may just have a hidden talent for this sort of
thing, and soon her phone number is on speed dial with every industry player in
Hollywood, including that of the director who has chosen Nathan to star in his next
film.

Pegged by the tabloids as "the next Brad Pitt," Nathan falls for his own hype and
winds up in the arms of his co-star, leaving behind Nina and child, ala Kevin
Federline, that is, until his new lady love insists they brand Nina an unfit mommy
in the tabloids.

Like any plucky heroine, Nina figures out how to hold onto her child and her sanity,
despite the rabid press nipping at her heels. As for finding true love in
Tinseltown, Brown says: "At least in fiction you can count on a happy ending, even
in Hollywood.\"

Web Site = http://www.josiebrown.com

Contact Details = Emily Fink
Avon/HarperCollins
emily.fink@harpercollins.com
212.207.7692

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