Philippa's happy to be escaping her father's honeymoon this summer. Instead she'll be working as a nanny for 10 year old twin girls in Maine. She leaves right after the wedding ceremony, before the cake cutting, and before saying goodbye to her father. She's whisked away in a limo to the house/spa where she will spend the next three months. Her limo driver moonlights as the gardener. He's such a hottie that Philippa can see her summer improving already. When she gets to the house, she realizes that she has more in common with her charges that she realized. First of all, they love black and her entire wardrobe contains nothing but black clothes. Secondly they've lost their mother in an accident, just like Philippa. No one talks about their mother's, but Philippa feels a bond and understanding better than their previous nannies. Her biggest challenge is to get the twins to have fun and relax, as they have a strict schedule of lessons and computer time. Philippa takes great pains to make cracks in the serious natures, even if it means taking on other members of the staff.
This book was enchanting and sweet. It pulled at your heartstrings (and I'm not talking about the romance aspect). I loved the twins need for someone to understand them and the nanny advertisement to fit.
Jade and Rich are in trouble again. Just a normal day at their new school, turns into something very dangerous and possibly deadly. The man their father helped make a "death run" (defecting from one side and creating a new identity -sort of the British witness protection program) has been compromised. He's been teaching math at their school and now the school's crawling with goons looking for him. Luckily for him, Jade and Rich have been through the kind of thing before. They're hatching plans of escape for themselves and their fellow classmates while trying to call in the cavalry.
The sequel to Sure Fire is another great ride chock full of action, mystery, and adventure. This book reads like a spy movie, drawing the reader in and not letting go until the very last page. I'm really hoping for more of the twins' adventures.
Sahara discovers that she's pregnant at sixteen. She's devastated and not sure who to tell. She doesn't want her mother to find out, even though she thinks her mom did just fine as a single mom raising two children. She doesn't tell anyone and just lets the knowledge fester inside her until she wants to burst out the news. Meanwhile, she's eating everything in sight, withdrawing from the world, and trying desperately to figure out her options.
Planet Pregnancy is a novel in verse, which is honest view that sucks in readers. It's a fast but meaty read. It's set-up in three parts, for the three trimesters. I really liked the book, but grew irritated over time with rhyming of the poems. While, it gave the book a rhythm, I felt that it also took away from the book where better words could have been chosen.
Planet Pregnancy is a novel in verse, which is honest view that sucks in readers. It's a fast but meaty read. It's set-up in three parts, for the three trimesters. I really liked the book, but grew irritated over time with rhyming of the poems. While, it gave the book a rhythm, I felt that it also took away from the book where better words could have been chosen.
No comments:
Post a Comment