#GIRLBOSS
#GIRLBOSS book cover

#GIRLBOSS

Paperback – Illustrated, September 29, 2015

Price
$9.50
Format
Paperback
Pages
256
Publisher
Portfolio
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1591847939
Dimensions
5.48 x 0.65 x 8.24 inches
Weight
8 ounces

Description

"Rather than present a get-rich-quick manual or a list of business tips, Amoruso teaches the innovative and entrepreneurial among us to play to our strengths, learn from our mistakes, and know when to break a few of the traditional rules." — Vanity Fair "A witty and cleverly told account . . . It’s this kind of honest advice, plus the humorous ups and downs of her rise in online retail, that make the book so appealing." — Los Angeles Times " #GIRLBOSS is more than a book . . . #GIRLBOSS is a movement." — Lena Dunham Sophia Amoruso is the Founder of Nasty Gal and the Founder and CEO of Girlboss. A creative visionary, modern-day entrepreneur, and fashion doyenne, Sophia has become one of the most prominent figures in retail and a cultural icon for a generation of women seeking ownership of their careers and futures. Her other books are The Girlboss Workbook and Nasty Galaxy. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Praise for Sophia Amoruso and #GIRLBOSS *Winner of the 2014 Goodreads Choice Award for Best Business Book* “While we love a feel-good story, we’re even more inspired by Amoruso’s drive and success.xa0.xa0.xa0. The easy-breezy blend of anecdotal tales and entrepreneurial advice makes for a fast, easy readxa0.xa0.xa0. with lots of brash but actionable takeawaysxa0.xa0.xa0. . Bottom line? That’s some serious #GirlPower. Buy the book today, thank us the second you’re done reading.” —SELF.com “The millennial alternative to Lean In .” — Inc. magazine, naming Sophia one of the Entrepreneurs of the Year “[Amoruso] addresses the highs and lows of her journey with an honesty that’s refreshing in a management memoirxa0.xa0.xa0. Amoruso’s swagger in #GIRLBOSS is contagious. The book is a decent model for all the girls—nay, people—who don’t want to climb the traditional career ladder. Her path, though unconventional, might even inspire a couple of readers to try to heed her lessons and follow in her footsteps. But if there’s one real takeaway from reading Amoruso, is that a pre-packaged rulebook for business success no longer exists.” — Fortune “[ #GIRLBOSS ] is part memoir, part management guide and part girl-power manifesto. A sort of Lean In for misfits, it offers young women a candid guide to starting a business and going after what they want.” — The Washington Post “The Cinderella of tech.” — The New York Times “Fashion’s new phenom.” — Forbes “Amoruso’s voice is accessible and charmingly self-deprecating without losing the effortless cool that characterizes her clothes.xa0.xa0.xa0. Amoruso’s scrappy capitalist narrative makes an admirable attempt to prove that navigating the system isn’t the same as endorsing it. Being antiestablishment is the old cool. The new cool is playing by your own rules and still winning by their standards.” — The New York Times Book Review “Sophia Amoruso, founder and CEO of Nasty Gal, shares her irreverent and invaluable lessons in what can easily be described as a power manifesto for strong, ambitious young women.xa0.xa0.xa0. #GIRLBOSS leads readers to water but doesn’t force them to drink; rather than present a get-rich-quick manual or a list of business tips, Amoruso teaches the innovative and entrepreneurial among us to play to our strengths, learn from our mistakes, and know when to break a few of the traditional rules.” — Vanity Fair “It’s easy to get the sense, reading Lean In , that Sandberg is writing for women who’ve already made it. #GIRLBOSS is for those who haven’t, which means it is aimed at people who have nothing to lose, which makes it a much riskier and more enjoyable manifesto.” — New York Magazine “A witty and cleverly told accountxa0.xa0.xa0. It’s this kind of honest advice, plus the humorous ups and downs of her rise in online retail, that make the book so appealing.xa0.xa0.xa0. Amoruso’s unconventional approach to business and her experiences as a rebellious teen and creative outcast would also appeal to anyone’s entrepreneurial side.” — Los Angeles Times “[Sophia Amoruso is] a real-deal, born disruptor. In less than ten years, she’s turned that very same eBay vintage shop into a bona fide, $100 million global brand, through pure sweat; social-media savvy; and an eye for the fashion-forward, subversively sexy clothing women want to wear.xa0.xa0.xa0. Now, sitting atop a mini-retail empire of over 350 employees, Sophia has become that rarest of things: a CEO who truly inspires and a patron saint of badass #girlbosses everywhere. Ahead, her thoroughly inspiring take on the unlikely rise of her scrappy brand, and why she’ll always be an upstart at heart.” —Refinery29 “[Sophia Amoruso] is every bit as uncommon as [Nasty Gal’s] track record. Never mind the Valley’s history of funding misfits like stinky fruitarian Steve Jobs, junk food smacking Marc Andreesen, or socially awkward Mark Zuckerberg. Those misfits all fit in a similar box, Amoruso did not.xa0.xa0.xa0. [Nasty Gal] is that gap between total dork and together, rich cheerleader where the bulk of girls who want to think for themselves but also be cool and accepted live.” —PandoDaily “[Sophia Amoruso] takes the wisdom of CEOs before her (including Sandberg) and wraps it up with her biography, personal philosophy, and practical advice (e.g., don’t slander former employees on social media), all delivered with the same voice and attitude that has made her site so successful.” —The Cut “If you read one book with a hashtag for a title this year, make it #GIRLBOSS .” — TechCrunch “Get motivated by Sophia Amoruso’s story.xa0.xa0.xa0. Her honest advice is useful for women in any industry.” — People (StyleWatch) “While Amoruso’s backstory is one we’re pretty much all well-versed in by now (we mean, what else are Google deep-dives for?), it’s still one that we just can’t seem to get enough of.” — The Coveteur “Everything Sophia touches has an air of cool, including her new book, #GIRLBOSS, which recounts the story of her first sale and her rise to retail stardom.xa0.xa0.xa0. The writing is witty and affable, like listening to a good friend tell you a story. And the advice runs the gamut from writing a good cover letter, to owning your own style, to getting fired gracefully. #GIRLBOSS is an essential read for everyone who has realized that the path to happiness isn’t always a straight line.” — The Standard / Culture Blog “Sophia sprinkles to-the-point wisdom into the story of her life so far (she’s not afraid of a little tough love), and this book is a must read for women of all ages. Who doesn’t love inspiration with a little kick in the butt?” —RealSimple.com / Lifestylers “There are some CEOs that can make running a company look ridiculously easy. Then there are some who can do it with, well, a certain je ne sais quoi. Sexiness is a subjective measure and it’s not just about looks. It’s also about success, power, ambition, charisma, altruism, fashion sense, and style.” — Business Insider (on naming Sophia Amoruso “The Sexiest CEO Alive”) “[An] appealing business memoirxa0.xa0.xa0. Amoruso’s authenticity comes through here and is, no doubt, one of the many reasons for her remarkable success.” — Publishers Weekly “Among the glut of leadership books featuring paunchy old men in power suits, at least #GIRLBOSS has a shot at standing out.xa0.xa0.xa0. It’s clear why young women admire her.xa0.xa0.xa0. #GIRLBOSS is targeting the same readers as Sheryl Sandberg’s updated Lean In for Graduates .xa0.xa0.xa0. So buy #GIRLBOSS for your daughter.” — Bloomberg Businessweek “In her new book #GIRLBOSS .xa0.xa0. Amoruso gives her charmingly authentic insight into how to succeed in the workplace.” —Who What Wear “Clearly, there’s some magic to the Amoruso method.” — LA Confidential “The book is full of so many great insights even though she insists it isn’t a how-to guide. You should absolutely read the entire book, but I think Amoruso should be commended for her management tips. They are what make her a #GIRLBOSS.” —Levo League “This sassy memoir inspires while also doling out career advice and entrepreneurial tips.” — Foam Magazine “#GIRLBOSS is a must have for any young female entrepreneurs.” — The T.U.R.N. Magazine “The honest, kickass confident, and unabashedly herself Amoruso tells the story of her journey to success through Nasty Gal and the lessons she learned along the way.” — Tech Cocktail “[Sophia Amoruso] began as a humble eBay store and turned her brand into one of the most coveted eCommerce destinations on the planet.xa0.xa0.xa0. Sophia’s brand sticks up its middle finger at the corporate world and Nasty Gal’s loyal followers can’t get enough of it.” —begoodclothes.com “Young women could do worse than learn from her no-bullshit style and tireless work ethic.” — Flavorwire “A breezy blend of memoir and entrepreneurial how-to.” — Sacramento News & Review PORTFOLIO / PENGUIN #GIRLBOSS Sophia Amoruso is the founder and executive chairman of the coveted fashion brand Nasty Gal. Named by Forbes as “Fashion’s New Phenom,” best-selling author Sophia has established herself as one of the most prominent figures in retail and a style icon. The term Nasty Gal was originally coined after a 1975 Betty Davis album and the singer’s outspoken and unapologetically sexy style. Building on that inspiration, Sophia’s Nasty Gal first sparked a cult following in her one-woman vintage venture on eBay where she quickly learned she had a knack and photographer’s eye for fashion, styling, and buying. In just nine years (and after being kicked off the site in 2008), the brand has grown into a one-stop shop and online retail haven with a progressive following of fashion risk-takers. In fall 2014, Sophia opened her first brick-and-mortar Nasty Gal retail space on Melrose Avenue in Los Angeles. Only four months later, she opened a second store on the Third Street Promenade in Santa Monica, Los Angeles, almost three times as large as the brand’s flagship. As part of the brand’s expansion beyond e-commerce, the stores offer highly curated vintage pieces, on-brand labels, as well as Nasty Gal’s own line. On the heels of Nasty Gal and #GIRLBOSS successes, Sophia is passionate about evolving her brand and team of creative mavericks in every way possible. As she continues to be deeply involved in every aspect of the business, she loves most to meet the girls who have inspired Nasty Gal to be one of the most coveted brands of our time. She recently founded the #GIRLBOSS Foundation, which awards financial grants to women in the worlds of design, fashion, music, and the arts, to help fund them on their way to becoming a GIRLBOSS. A New York Times bestseller and published in fifteen countries around the world, #GIRLBOSS is Sophia’s first book. PORTFOLIO / PENGUIN An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC 375 Hudson Street New York, New York 10014 penguin.com First published in the United States of America by Portfolio / Penguin and G. P. Putnam’s Sons, members of Penguin Group (USA) LLC, 2014 This paperback edition with a new introduction published 2015 Copyright © 2014, 2015 by Sophia Amoruso Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader. Photographs courtesy of the author ISBN 978-0-698-15490-2 Penguin is committed to publishing works of quality and integrity. In that spirit, we are proud to offer this book to our readers; however, the story, the experiences, and the words are the author’s alone. Cover design: Christopher Sergio Cover photograph: Gabrielle Revere INTRODUCTION TO THE INTRODUCTION A lot has changed since I wrote this book two years ago. We made record-breaking revenues. Nasty Gal grew so fast it became the Tower of Babel. We went through layoffs for the first time. I turned thirty. Then I turned thirty-one. We opened two brick-and-mortar (#brickandmurder) stores in Los Angeles. My hair is long! I’m an adult with braces! I have three poodles! Most importantly, I got married. About those layoffsxa0.xa0.xa0. we started to feel the hard times only after this book was originally put to print. One hundred million in revenue is a lot of money—but companies much larger have gone extinct. The concept of success is really weird. Is success building a beloved brand and business? Or is it how you handle yourself when it gets hard? Is success being in the right place at the right time—with the right voice, skill set, team, and drive to cobble it all together? Or is success figuring out how to tame the behemoth once it sprouts legs and sharp teeth? I think about this all the time as I’ve watched Nasty Gal grow up. At first, it was a scrappy crumb-eating infant—and then it became a thriving wild child. Now, it’s hit the awkwardness of puberty—the occasional bout of acne, a cracking voice, incipient self-consciousness. Wait—are all these people looking at me? They say that when you have a kid, it feels like your heart is outside of your body—you can’t imagine sending her off to school with the threat that she might get hit by a car or bullied by some asshole. But you have to, because that’s what growing up is all about. That’s how I feel about Nasty Gal. My whole future is in this brand—but at the end of the day, I can only give it a kiss on the head and a PB&J while standing at the front door. It’s still not fully baked. Its success depends on the resilience, fortitude, and ingenuity of the team more than any one skill that I possess. The older I get, the less confident I become. There’s simply more to lose. I used to snowboard—I’d fly down the slopes at a million miles per hour with nary a bit of concern—but today, I sense my own mortality—and the mortality of everything I’ve worked for—as soon as the alarm clock goes off each morning, knowing that at this speed my teeth could get knocked out if I biff it. It’s really weird to be in your twenties and have a company that’s valued at hundreds of millions of dollars by investors, implying to the outside world that because I own a huge chunk of the stock I’m “worth” a lot of money. The funny thing is that it’s funny money. Nearly everything I’ve earned is locked up in this beautiful, inspiring, evolving business I gave birth to nearly ten years ago. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In the
  • New York Times
  • bestseller that the
  • Washington Post
  • called “
  • Lean In
  • for misfits,” Sophia Amoruso shares how she went from dumpster diving to founding one of the fastest-growing retailers in the world.
  • Amoruso spent her teens hitchhiking, committing petty theft, and scrounging in dumpsters for leftover bagels. By age twenty-two she had dropped out of school, and was broke, directionless, and checking IDs in the lobby of an art school—a job she’d taken for the health insurance. It was in that lobby that Sophia decided to start selling vintage clothes on eBay.Flash forward to today, and she’s the founder of Nasty Gal and the founder and CEO of Girlboss. Sophia was never a typical CEO, or a typical anything, and she’s written
  • #GIRLBOSS
  • for other girls like her: outsiders (and insiders) seeking a unique path to success, even when that path is windy as all hell and lined with naysayers.
  • #GIRLBOSS
  • proves that being successful isn’t about where you went to college or how popular you were in high school. It’s about trusting your instincts and following your gut; knowing which rules to follow and which to break; when to button up and when to let your freak flag fly.“A witty and cleverly told account . . . It’s this kind of honest advice, plus the humorous ups and downs of her rise in online retail, that make the book so appealing.” —
  • Los Angeles Times
  • “Amoruso teaches the innovative and entrepreneurial among us to play to our strengths, learn from our mistakes, and know when to break a few of the traditional rules.” —
  • Vanity Fair
  • “#GIRLBOSS is more than a book . . . #GIRLBOSS is a movement.” —Lena Dunham

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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(2.3K)
★★★★
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(1.9K)
★★★
15%
(1.1K)
★★
7%
(535)
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Left me feeling inspired.

If you’re lacking motivation in your life right now, this is the book you want to be picking up next. Full of inspiration from the very start, #GIRLBOSS will leave you wanting to go out there and prove to the world you can achieve anything you set your mind on.

Although #GIRLBOSS isn’t a biography, we get to know Sophia throughout the book and hear how she became the badass lady that she is today. Her hilarious writing and her encouraging enthusiasm for the business she runs make this book delightful and inspiring to read.

Sophia Amoruso is the founder of Nasty Gal, a hugely successful online clothing store that originally started out on eBay. From humble beginnings, Sophia worked tirelessly on her business, adding a personal touch to everything she did, from photographing the clothes models to arranging the most eye-catching thumbnails, to even making sure the labels were placed neatly on the packaging when she sent the item to its new owner.

Through her endless passion for the work she did and the effort she put into focusing on her customers, making sure she paid close attention to every bit of feedback she received, Sophia transformed Nasty Gal into the success story that it is today.

This book is all about empowerment, encouraging women to go out and kick ass at everything they do. It’s also got fantastic attitude injected into the writing that makes every chapter sharp and witty. What really works about this book is how wonderfully honest Sophia is about herself and about business. Her life and her journey to where she is now makes for some interesting and entertaining reading. She is able to admit where she has gone wrong in the past, and how some of her mistakes have helped her to get where she is now.

#GIRLBOSS isn’t a book that is going to lecture you on what you’re doing wrong. It’s there to tell it as it is, and to prove to you that you can deal with it. Sophia isn’t going to tell you what you should do, but she offers advice as to what can help you based on her experiences and the knowledge she has gained in business.

This book is all about creativity, being driven, and stepping up to be the boss that you are. With its quirky design and witty writing, #GIRLBOSS is a fun read that will hopefully leave you feeling inspired to go out there and make your dreams a reality.
8 people found this helpful
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Great book

This is a good book for teens and young adult women looking to better understand what is possible. The book itself just pulls you in. I read some excerpts to my daughter -- at least that was the plan, and ended up reading most of the book in an afternoon/evening to her because it simply was just "that good" --- yes, it was.
4 people found this helpful
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Poorly written by a poor (perhaps delusional) rolemodel

This book is so poorly written with so few complete personal accounts, I began to think it was ghost written. Few of the chapters completed their outlined goal, often falling off course and becoming overly broad, repeating things from previous chapters pr reaffirmations/humble brags about her success (these were really hard to take seriously knowing she had bankrupted her company). Some more specific points about why this book is loathsome:

1. Amoruso talks about going to the mall with her mom and telling her that she didn't understand why anyone would pay so much to dress like everyone else. Amoruso suggests she has always been an industrious and creative child! Oh wait, a later chapter features a photo of her in her "Abercrombie and Fitch" stage at 15. Interesting.

2. As a teenager, Amoruso thought she would never succumb to capitalism. Later: pays people in lesser positions with burgers, sells and overcharges sweatshop clothing, buys Prada and a Porsche. Mhm...

3. Appears to use this book as an opportunity to shame innocent people or people she just can't seem to get over. For example, in the early days of her company, she hired someone much older than her. He didn't know how to use a computer well and had a family. After he needed a day off during his first week to do something, she fired him (and years later complained about him in her book? Wtf?)

An even better example: after buying her Porsche, Amoruso was at work talking about how flashy her Porsche was and how awkward she felt driving it. One co-worker said to her, "be careful, because now people are saying "I'm doing my job to pay for a Porsche." What does Amoruso take from this? That you can't be friends with your employees. She didn't believe anyone else had a problem with her car purchase but that one person she just singled out in her book (cool. Not petty at all. So #girlboss). What she probably should have taken as a lesson? It's rude to discuss your financial success in front of others. You seem unprofessional.

4. Other failures of the book: preaches unorthodoxy and feminism before writing that a woman better wear a bra to a job interview, even with a company like "Nast Gal." Oh yeah, and let's not forget that Amoruso fires pregant people without paying a proper severance.

Don't BUY this book or anything from Nasty Gal. This woman does not deserve anyone's support.
3 people found this helpful
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Capitalism-heavy

Unpopular opinion, I know, but I just really was not liking this book and ended up not even finishing it.

I really liked the premise of the book: I mean, it’s called Girlboss and I’m a feminist, match made in heaven, right?

I will admit that I did enjoy the beginning of the book where she talks about her life before she was so successful. I enjoyed imagining her living in a tiny cramped space selling thrifted clothes on ebay, barely making enough to get by.

However, it seems that once she got successful, she now believes that it’s this easy for EVERYONE. She kind of preaches about how much she loves capitalism, basically, and how anyone can be successful as long as they work hard. This just rubbed me the wrong way because she just completely ignores all the people who do work extremely hard but just don’t have the same opportunities as she did.

If you are a fan of capitalism, you might really enjoy this book, but otherwise, I wouldn’t recommend this.
2 people found this helpful
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#GIRLBOSS by Sophia Amoruso

#GIRLBOSS by Sophia Amoruso
Part business memoir, part entertainment, this book had some practical, usable advice for entry level business workers, primarily female. It also included a lot of funny stories of her life on eBay and the internet. Mostly it stresses that you go your own way and be your own person.

Business books often put me to sleep. This book was entertaining with a positive attitude. I like that.
2 people found this helpful
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she had never mentioned "Gary"-- or any other love interest/boyfriend-- anywhere prior to that in the book

This book was a fast and often entertaining read, but it was also downright weird. It was part memoir, part how-to book, and the "how to" covered everything from "how to write a resume and get a job" to "how to handle employees when you're a boss."

It was disjointed and unorganized, jumping around from one topic to another without rhyme or reason, and it would often include strange references out of nowhere. (For instance, towards the very end the author mentions a 1%er tattoo she got when she and "Gary" were still together, but unless I missed it, she had never mentioned "Gary"-- or any other love interest/boyfriend-- anywhere prior to that in the book.)

It read like a bunch of blog entries slapped together, and I was often left scratching my head. At times I wondered who this book was supposed to be for. Sometimes she seemed to be talking to a teenager reader and other times to an experienced CEO running a company.

I hadn't ever heard of Nasty Gal clothing before reading this book (and to be honest, that name is as obnoxious to me as the title of this book, "#Girlboss") and I don't claim to know anything at all about fashion. But I was intrigued by the book cover and, despite the patronizing and annoying yet "social media"-type catchy book title, the author's story. She was a high school dropout (I think?) who went from dumpster diving to stealing things at stores to starting her own business that eventually ended up being worth over a million dollars.

Originally she sold vintage clothes on eBay, which intrigued me because I too used to sell things (mostly clothes, but also books and movies etc.) on eBay. Like Sophia, I would go to thrift stores and find good deals on fashionable, like new clothes that I would resell for a profit on eBay. It was a big source of income for me from my last year of high school all the way through law school, until eBay, in my opinion, changed and became way too buyer (and sometimes scam) friendly and also became a marketplace where one had to compete with a slew of $5 outfits from China.

But I have always been an entrepreneur at heart and I have fond memories of making good money on eBay back when there was good money to be made. So I was interested in the fact that Sophia Amoruso's eBay store became a real life clothing store and fashion brand. And I could relate to the time period in which she grew up (she's a bit younger than I am but it was more or less the same era) and the importance of rising Internet business opportunities.

I personally enjoyed the memoir aspects of the book although some of it seemed suspicious to me. She brags about her hard work and success and says that the Universe gave it to her because she deserves it, rather than just getting lucky. But she mentions an online feud in which she's accused of colluding with another fashion seller to drive up the prices of her auctions, and she also mentions getting banned from eBay for failure to abide by their terms. I wish there had been more explanation about these things.

She does say she used to steal a lot of stuff but she eventually got tired of living the lawless lifestyle and wanted to make an honest living. That's the kind of explanation I was looking for in terms of what happened with her eBay store. Otherwise I was side-eyeing her for bad business practices and I felt it was wrong of her to claim she deserved/earned things that perhaps she achieved dishonestly (which could be the name of the game in business, but then, own it-- don't act like you're better than everyone else when really you played the same game.)

What I really liked about Sophia's story is that it showed that you don't have to be on some straight and narrow kindergarten-through-MBA path to make a good living and be successful. She was not someone who enjoyed school or did well in school, nor did she want to. She is someone whom others would refer to as a "screw-up" to put it nicely, and she didn't fit in with the traditional definition of "smart" or "successful." But she pursued her interests and found an area she loved and did well at it, and that's awesome. I feel like this is a great book for anyone (especially a teenage young woman) who isn't considered academically or traditionally "successful" but who has guts and moxy and determination. High school can be hell for some young women (and men) but there is life after high school and a way for everyone to find their way even if they hated high school (and for good reason!)

I also like the emphasis on our changing culture; creativity and "street smarts" are valued more now than pure academics or the kind of education that was in place when public schools were made to teach kids how to be factory workers. Many employers don't care as much about one's educational accomplishments (although those always help too of course, and are a requirement for *some* jobs) as one's ability to roll up one's sleeves, dive right in and be passionate about the job and the experience.

I didn't like Sophia's "business advice" nearly as much as I liked the autobiographical parts of her book. It was mostly immature and cliche, and I found myself rolling my eyes a lot. She preached to her fellow millennials about not feeling like everything should be handed to them and not being special snowflakes. While I can appreciate her intent, I just thought that the writing style was clumsy and awkward and so the message didn't come across well, especially after reading about how entitled SHE used to be-- thinking she could push a whole cart full of stolen stuff (including tampons, since she had no money to buy them) out of a Walmart and straight to her car without ever getting caught. (Of course she did, eventually.)

I also thought that the description was misleading in claiming that this book doesn't patronize young women like other business books supposedly do. In fact I think it patronized them even more than most business books do, by assuming they don't know how to write a resume and that they're spoiled and entitled. In one part she tells women not to bring their kid or pet to a job interview and that if they don't wear a bra, she won't hire them. I found this part really strange, because in the fashion world a lot of people don't wear bras, and for a book billed with such "girl power" vibes, it was cringe-worthy to me that she focused on an article of clothing that only women wear (or not). I've interviewed and hired employees before and if a single mom brought her kid to the interview and explained that she couldn't afford childcare until she got a job, I hope I'd understand and not hold it against her. And, again, I'm not in the fashion world (and I don't think that was the purpose of the author's statement about a bra) but I don't ever notice or care if a woman is wearing a bra or not. I feel that it's entirely her choice and unless she's wearing a see-through shirt that is distracting in the workplace and against the dress code (IF there's a dress code... which there doesn't seem to be in Ms. Amoruso's workplace because she likes to talk about how fashion-forward and casual they are), then I don't see what that has to do with the person's work abilities or performance.

By the end of this book I was mostly annoyed but parts of it were interesting and even inspiring. I did Google Nasty Gal since I hadn't heard of the company, and my search led me down a rabbit hole of negative press. Apparently Nasty Gal is alleged to have violated California employment laws by firing pregnant employees and denying them benefits to which they're entitled. Apparently it's an awful place to work and employees are mistreated. And apparently the company is not doing well financially. If true I find the "girl power" aspect of the book rather hypocritical and I must take everything in the book with an even bigger grain of salt.

I give this book 2.5 stars. It had an interesting premise but ended up falling really flat, at least for the purposes for which I wanted to read it. I've owned my own law practice for 4 years and I have some other "business ventures" on the side. While they do decently, none of them have made the kind of money that the author has but there isn't much I learned from this book except the importance of social media, which was an important tidbit I've started to realize for myself and that the book helped me realize is even a bigger deal than I'd thought.

I would, however, recommend this book to any teenager who doesn't like school or the traditional straight and narrow path but who shows a lot of promise in terms of creativity and drive... so maybe I'm just not the right audience for it.
2 people found this helpful
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awesome

I stumbled on the book and read it in one night,I actually enjoyed her story so much I emailed nasty gal,she got back to me thanking me for the support! Good read
2 people found this helpful
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A condescending "How To" book towards the end...

I couldn't put the book down at first! I was incredibly captured by the storyline; how a bad attitude, non-conformist chick worked her ass off from the bottom and is now CEO of her own major corporation. Awesome! However, the book is just not very well written. It's part memoir, part self help, part instructional, part "how to work for me." As a business woman myself, I'm always interested in these reads. Unfortunately, the book went from awesome at about 120mph to a complete boring checklist of who she hires and doesn't, and how to write a resume, cover letters, etc... Sophia, you're one bad ass chick, but not all gals are reading this looking to break into the corporate world of fashion without the slightest clue on how to do it. Something tells me that if she read this book while young, she would be disgusted by the condescending corporate attitude. Thank you, Sophia, however, I do not want to work for you and wasted a good portion of my eveing reading how to write a resume, not chew gum during an interview, and not have my phone out. A very easy read worthwhile for a much younger population, indeed. Would not recommend to friends my own age in their early 30's.
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The book is just great! It is an excellent primer on starting a ...

The book is just great! It is an excellent primer on starting a business and exactly what you need to do to succeed. However, the book is full of advice on how to just succeed in life and work. I highly recommend the book.

Sophia is an accidental success. She details her lack of interest in most work or school type things, until it became clear that she was going to need to do something to be able to eat and pay rent. She turned to the only thing she was good at and that was finding used designer clothes at thrift stores. She took these finds and sold them on Ebay. Her first sale hooked her and from then on, she became a machine. She scoured the thrift stores, put together outfits, photographed the results and posted them on Ebay, all the while advertising her Ebay postings on MySpace to hundreds if not thousands of girls her age who might be intererested in purchasing the items. The formula worked. Her "Nasty Gal" brand took off and her fashion retail business became a success. The book chronicles that success and tells about the ups and downs and challenges along the way. Even if you do not want to start a business the book is full of life lessons, as Sophia tells about the things she has learned on her journey.

I had never heard of Nasty Gal or Sophia Amoruso before picking up this book. I came to this book after having read a review of "Lean in" by Sheryl Sandberg, which details how to be successful if you have a good education, money, and the right connections. Sophia's book was advertised as the "Lean in" for the people without education, money or connections. Sophia built her business on shear stubborn hard work born out of necessity. The book's message is simple and stated in the title "#GirlBoss". A Girl Boss is someone who takes ownership of her own destiny and works hard to make it happen. She gets back up if knocked down and either bullheadedly barges forward or figures out another way to get where she wants to go.

The book reminds us that success is a crooked path and tells us to keep fighting. I loved the book.
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and intelligent. I couldn't put this book down

Sophia is inspiring, hilarious, and intelligent. I couldn't put this book down!
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