I began the Flyy Girl trilogy years ago and recall loving the first book, liking the second one and never getting around to the final one. I finally checked the third book out and I did not like it at all. I will say, I am a bit older than I was when I read the first book and have been exposed to a lot of authors, so that may play a role in my review of Boss Lady. The title alone is interesting because the character Vanessa-not Tracy can be classified as a boss. The cover states that Flyy Girl is back and this time she's a boss (I am paraphrasing). That's not close to being the truth. The story line follows Vanessa's pursuit to convince Tracy to seek a deal to adapt Flyy Girl the book into a movie. Tracy seems to have lost her edge and it is Vanessa coming up with all of the ideas, planning and getting a team together to accomplish this goal. The meat of the story focuses on the one week that Tracy spends in Philadelphia with Vanessa and her friends doing preproduction work on the movie. That's it. Tyree plays a bit of a Where are they now game and characters from Flyy Girl make brief sometimes nonsensical appearances, but that's it.To top it off, Jason is portrayed as a one dimensional character and his story line could have been left out. By the time you get to the end of ther book, Tracy's character is questionable and Tyree never clears that up. The book ends with nothing accomplished.The book also reads like, Tyree had some opinions about Hollywood, entertainers and his fellow peers that he wanted to get off his chest and used this book as a vehicle. Perhaps, Tyree wanted to give his reader's one final installment of the Flyy Girl series. Flyy girl was portrayed as a shero when the first book was released. Tyree watered her down and painted her as a manipulator. One last thing, I know Sistah Souljah did it, but I think it is incredible vain when an author adds him/herself as a character in the book. It worked a little for Souljah-not so much with Tyree.