Lady Boss (Lucky Santangelo, #3) by Jackie Collins


Lady Boss (Lucky Santangelo, #3)
Title : Lady Boss (Lucky Santangelo, #3)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0671023470
ISBN-10 : 9780671023478
Language : English
Format Type : Mass Market Paperback
Number of Pages : 640
Publication : First published November 1, 1990

The dangerously beautiful Lucky -- star of two of Jackie Collins' previous smash, international number one bestsellers, Chances and Lucky -- returns in Lady Boss. And this time the shockingly sensual, ruthlessly clever Lucky is out to conquer Hollywood!

In Chances Lucky grew up in a top crime family. In Lucky, she was married three times. And now, in Lady Boss, she takes on Hollywood and wins!

Panther Studios is the prize and Lucky wants it... In her quest for power she meets adversaries and enemies, friends and betrayers. And her relationship with her husband, charismatic comedian and movie star, Lennie Golden is put to the test.

Lucky's first challenge is to buy the only movie studio still not controlled by a powerful conglomerate -- Panther Studios, owned by the retired, irascible, old Abe Panther. But Abe won't sell his beloved studio to Lucky until she proves she has the guts to make it in Hollywood. It's his idea that she disguise herself as a secretary and go in undercover to find out what's really going on. It's a challenge that also satisfies Lucky's passion for adventure -- and her desire to take chances...

In the process, Lucky uncovers a world of financial scheming, big-time betrayal, and bizarre sex.

Panther Studios and Lucky Santangelo... a dangerous mix...

When Lucky makes her final move, assuming the role of Lady Boss at Panther Studios, she stuns the entire industry and sets off a series of shock waves, not only threatening her marriage to Lennie, but bringing down on her head the hatred of crime boss Carlos Bonnatti -- a hatred that goes back generations, putting in peril her life, and the lives of everyone close to her!

With Lady Boss, Jackie Collins brings back one of her most intriguing and endearing characters, Lucky Santangelo. She also proves once again that she is the unquestioned queen of glamorous fiction.


Lady Boss (Lucky Santangelo, #3) Reviews


  • Diane Wallace

    Great series! interesting,entertaining,intuitive storyline that the author even took the time to add many of the same characters from previous series..nice storytelling as always (paperback!)

  • Ayesha Selden

    I'm not even ashamed to give this Jackie Collins novel a 5 star along with writers like Toni Morrison and Alice Walker. Why, you ask? Because 20 years ago, when I picked up my first JC novel, as a freshman in high school, this filth lured me into a love for the written word. I read every one of her books I could get my hands on. I was fascinated by Lucky Santangelo and I wanted to be a Boss! So out of respect for the author who helped an inner city girl love to read, I give 5 *'s

  • MasterSal

    So despite me having marked this as read - I don’t recall anything that happens in it. Compare that to book 2 which is still recall - it was one of the first books I sneaked off my parents shelves when I realized that trashy books existed ...

    Time for a reread methinks...

  • Michelle

    Still the very best book I have ever read. The book that makes me feel like women can be powerful creatures. Read this a very long time ago but I still love this book.

  • Kathryn

    Lady Boss, for me, was kind of a risky investment of time. Chances and Lucky make for good companions in that they comprise one long story arc. Lady Boss, while carrying over several characters, introduces a new story arc and a cast of, ah, interesting people. The Santangelo bunch naturally are more three-dimensional and familiar, and only a few of the Hollywood folks endear themselves to you.

    What's interesting is how timely this story remains. Lucky vows to clean up a studio mired in sexism and gets it done. This is a book from the 80s, and we're still dealing with these issues in entertainment.

    The end appears to tie up all the ends in neat epilogue, so I'm curious to see what the next book brings.

  • Josh

    Another Jackie Collins gets five stars from me. I love the Santangelo series and I especially loved this book. The concept of Lucky going undercover to work for Panther Studios was brilliant and I loved learning more about her and the other main characters’ lives. Jackie’s writing is immersive and a pure escapism for me.

  • Miki_cchi

    For me, it was not as exciting as the first two. That being said, it is still a good series to read.

  • Francine Scott

    The late, Jackie Collins is easily overlooked as a literary contributor. The fabulous wealth and decadence of the characters who find their way into her blockbusters may seem an unlikely setting for a noteworthy legacy. The Bitch, The World is Full of Married Men, Hollywood Wives and Lady Boss all find their drama in the neurosis of the rich and the conflict for women at this sharpest end of competitive society. The seduction of luxury and power alone are given an erotic charge. Her heroines, nonetheless, have desires that she has devoted her life to crafting into erotic writing which ultimately captures a sexual encounter on a woman's terms. It would be a mistake to think this trite. Few writers, however great, have achieved this with any success. Collins is one of the few.

  • S. Valentine

    Jackie Collins does it again… delivers an action packed, bold, unputdownable book. This novel mainly focuses on Lucky and her journey to take over Panther studio’s, where she goes undercover. She wants to suprise her actor husband Lennie. It also follows the lives of several other intriguing characters. Jackie’s characters are as strong as ever, and her plots unpredictable and timeless. You never know what you’re getting with Jackie’s novels – her characters have a way of suprising you. I’m a huge JC fan, and will continue to read them, until I’ve finished them all, so check back for more reviews on this author.

  • Ilene

    While I still love Lucky and Lennie and some others...this book just lacked a lot of everything. Too many characters, not enough development of them??

    Abe and his whole studio charade, I get why he did it but it was extreme. I am with Gino, Lucky really shouldn't have went after it without Lennie knowing about it.

  • The Book Posh

    This book was decent. It didn't light my fire but it was still a good read. I am on a quest to finish this series. These are my first Jackie Collins books. I am beginning to realize that I don't really love Hollywood trash books but they are, at the same time, kind of fun!!

  • Monica

    Trash novel. Summer read.

  • Sharyn

    Another good book in the Lucky Santangelo series

  • Joe

    Lucky Santangelo is back! reads the blurb on the cover of the hardback edition, and boy is she ever.

    So, to catch you up, I’ve been re-reading, just for the heck of it, all of the trashy novels I loved as a kid. I’ve finished
    Lucky (click for my review of that racy number), and now I’ve completed Lady Boss—the sequel (threequel? Is that thing?) to Jackie Collins’ Lucky which, in turn, is a sequel to Jackie’s bestseller Chances.

    You won’t need to read any of the other books to enjoy Lady Boss. It’s a stand-alone novel with enough flashbacks and references to events in the first two novels to keep you in the loop of the tangled relations between the standing characters.

    Ready? Ok.

    September, 1985. Lady Boss opens with someone putting a hit on Lucky. We don’t know who and we don’t know why but there you go. Then, we learn that Lucky, the gangsta self-absorbed she-of-the-jet hair heroine, is planning to buy a movie studio as a gift to her sexy comedian husband, Lennie Golden (their hot and horny romance is detailed in Lucky).

    You see, Lennie is the next up-and-coming comedian giving Eddie Murphy and Chevy Chase a run for their money, and he’s filming his first movie, Macho Man, for Panther Studios. Except he hates it, and he’s committed to a three-movie contract. So Lucky, being the chances taking wheeler dealer that she is, decides to buy Panther Studios as a surprise, free Lennie from his contract, and BAM! it’s all good for everyone.

    But here’s the rub: before Abe Panther will sell his eponymous movie studio to Lucky, she must go undercover as a secretary for six weeks to spy on the movie stars and executives because something something dirt on the nepotistic studio executive husband of Abe's daughter. Doesn’t really matter. What really matters is will Lucky be able to pull off this charade? Will Lennie discover her surprise? And what juicy shenanigans will Lucky uncover at the movie studio?

    So, there you go. That’s pretty much the gist. The first half follows Lucky in disguise as “Luce” (complaining constantly to herself about her disguise because she doesn’t look pretty) as she learns more about the thinly veiled awesomely trashy cast of characters populating the movie studio. And what a cast.

    We have the pop singer/movie star Virginia Venus Maria Serria (a not even thinly veiled reference to Madonna) who’s starring in a private detective movie, Strut (Dick Tracy anyone?), and is rumored to be having a torrid affair with her co-star and movie director, Cooper Turner, a Hollywood manwhore who has slept with all of his leading ladies (Warren Beatty, obvs).

    Except that’s not the case. Venus Maria is actually screwing Warren’s, I mean Cooper’s, best friend—the charismatic New York City real estate mogul Martin Z. Swanson (one guess who that’s supposed to be. Gross). Meanwhile, Deena Swanson, his icy and perfect socialite wife, is planning a murder and has already hired lawyers to defend her, including Steven Berkeley, Lucky’s half-brother. Also, Venus’ slimy brother Emilio has his own plans to make some fast cash.

    Then the second half follows the aftershock once the gig is up and every one knows Lucky is the new owner of Panther Studios. Will Lucky and Lennie’s marriage survive? Will some underhanded dealings unearthed by Lucky be the death of her? And who put the hit on Lucky?

    There’s a slew of other over-the-top characters that populate the novel, and at 513 pages (in the edition I read) it’s a thick and juicy summer time beach read even better than the one before it. Thankfully, it’s not as problematic as Lucky but just as entertaining.

    Next up, most likely, is Lovers and Gamblers. I don’t even have to re-read this one to tell you it’s hands down the best Jackie Collins novel. I’ve re-read it numerous times. If you only read one of Jackie’s novels that is the one. I can’t wait to read it again.

  • sheila

    MIND BLOWING!!! I came across this book in the thrift section of a lousy supermarket, the title intrigued me so I bought it with a ‘why not?’ mindset. And few days later I thank the lord that I had decided to buy it!!! It did not disappoint at all! This was the first ever Jackie Collins book I’ve ever read, I didn’t know who she was before as I was born in the 2000s.. I’m very sorry to hear her death even though I’m like 5 years too late. Anyways, sorry for the long rant, the point is that this book is totally worth the read, the plot, the characters, EVERYTHING! I love it I wish I could take it to my grave. Now that I’ve read this spectacular-impressive-outstanding-totally unforgettable book, I feel like there’s no other book that could ever EVER live up to it. I’m in love with Lucky Santangelo, she’s my new role model!! Wish I could give 7 out of 5 stars..

  • Sandra Noonan

    If you like Lucky, you will love this

    If you're a fan of Lucky and the characters around her, you will enjoy this book. If you're new to the series, maybe not so much. It's better to start with Chances and read them in order. Lucky tends to wander into Mary Sue territory more often than not, but the story is great, lots of intertwined plots and
    characters, both shady and sweet.

  • Jake

    So after two books and almost 2k pages of enough internalized misogyny to make Phyllis Schlafly blush, with stories chock full of men and women who will literally hump anyone and anything, Jackie Collins suddenly decides to make Lucky purchase a movie studio...in order to get rid of casting couches and male dominance in favor of female-driven movies that are less horny. What?

    Whatever. I'll still keep reading this garbage.

  • Lee-anna Dunk

    Lucky Santangelo is a strong beautiful sassy independent woman who takes no prisoners. Running her studio her family with one hand tied behind her back she could do it all. But don't mess with whats hers she will bring you down and make you stay down.

  • Kat

    Really enjoyed this as ever, with a fantastic cross section of players in the narrative. Great fun and incredibly addictive, it consumes hours you didn't realise until you see the time! Highly recommended

  • Tomi

    I had truly forgotten how well Jackie Collins can draw you into a story. You don't want to leave, even when it is over. The lives of the rich and famous are tangled and convoluted. Lucky is quite a character, a woman to be reckoned with.

  • E. Jamie

    A wonderful exploration of Lucky's growth as a character as she learns how strength comes in different ways. Loved watching her learning how to navigate a marriage and what it really means to be a true partner to someone you love without losing your own bad ass sense of self.

  • Nikki

    My first Jackie Collins. It didn’t matter that I hadn’t read the first two Lucky Santangelo books, there is enough info given - but not too much, no major info dumps - for it to be easily coherent. A lot of characters which initially made it hard to keep track of everyone, but a fun page turner.

  • Shannon

    Thankfully I was able to get a audiobook of the long winded and boring, plotless book. This was so superficial and unrealistic I don’t remember much of what happened and don’t care to. Can’t wait to finish this horrible series.

  • Lea Kane

    Lucky goes undercover to purchase Panther Studios. It is definitely fast-paced, some of it predictable but yet keeps you reading till the end. A few surprises, nothing huge. She does wrap things up a bit quickly. Still a fairly good read. 3.5 stars.

  • Wayland Quon

    Page turner

    Jackie Collins does it again . Another page turner . Great characters and great mention of other characters from her other books