Dirty Girl Pretty Woman

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sarah Phillips has never been afraid of hard work, high stakes, or the kind of environments where grit matters as much as intelligence. With a career built in the demanding world of petroleum engineering and energy services, she carved out a reputation as a sharp technical mind, a trusted problem‑solver, and a natural leader. From her early days mastering the intricacies of electrical submersible pumping systems to her roles in business development and account management, Sarah has consistently thrived in spaces where few women are represented — and even fewer rise. Her story is one of resilience, reinvention, and the courage to step fully into her own voice.

Her upcoming book, *Dirty Girl, Pretty Woman*, brings that journey into the light. It’s a bold, unfiltered exploration of identity, ambition, and the complicated terrain women navigate when they’re expected to be both tough and polished, assertive yet accommodating. Sarah writes with the same clarity and conviction she brings to her work in the energy sector, offering readers a narrative that is as empowering as it is deeply personal. The title itself captures the tension she has lived with — the pressure to fit a mold and the determination to break it.

What makes Sarah’s story so compelling is not just where she has been, but how she has chosen to tell it. She brings the perspective of someone who has worked on the ground, in the field, and in the boardroom. She understands the culture of male‑dominated industries from the inside, and she speaks to the women who have felt unseen, underestimated, or boxed in by expectations. *Dirty Girl, Pretty Woman* is her invitation to step out of those constraints — and her testament to what happens when you do.

As Sarah prepares to share her book with the world, she stands not only as an accomplished engineer and business professional, but as a powerful new voice in women’s storytelling. Her journey is raw, real, and overdue. Readers will see themselves in her struggles, her triumphs, and her refusal to be defined by anyone else’s script.