Day Four of Six in Countdown to Release
So it continues, agents, The six-part review session of Perry Kirkpatrick's The Accidental Cases of Emily Abbot and the countdown to the Saturday release of Tales from Parallel Worlds. If you haven't already, be sure to enter the raffle for a chance at winning either a signed copy of Red Rover, Red Rover or a Jes Drew swag bag with two designer pins, a sticker, and a coaster. Enter Here!
And back to the main events...
Review of Tutor, Nanny, Spit-Up, Spy
The fourth book of the series, and my favorite of them all! Emily goes undercover to be the live-in nanny for the president of a South American country's four small children, who were sweet in their own ways. And, of course, Brett is their tutor.
And one of the guards might be trying to assasinate the president.
It was just so fun seeing Emily and Brett working together and communicating while trying to give the guise of not actually knowing each other very well. And the daughter of the family was shipping them so hard.
Me too, girl. Me too. Maybe someday Emily will see it, too...
(Level Seven Classification: Relationship Diagnosis):
Unrequited Love that everyone else notices too:
Brett's affections for Emily seem to grow more in this book, and he seems to be vacillating between trying to step back from it and just going with it. The children are noticing it too, which is flustering Emily, but Brett finds it very amusing...
Now, to part two of this blog post-
The fourth story in this collection is called "Dance of Royalty." This is the beginning of a Rapunzel retelling and the prologue to the upcoming Clockwork Faerie Tale Novella series releasing next year.
Once
upon a time, there was a little girl. A princess, actually. But she
never saw herself as different from other little girls. She was just
her.
Twirling
in her own little dance, the princess smiles. After all, like other
little girls, she had a mommy and a daddy who loved her—
they claimed they loved her more than she loved them, but she knew
better. Just like other girls.
But
the little princess knew she was luckier than other little girls, not
because she was royalty. No, she was luckier because she had her
mommy
and daddy and not a different set who she might not actually
out-love.
"Rapunzel!"
called a voice from the castle, and the little princess spins around
in her dance to grin. Her father, the majestic king, looked out from
the doorway of the palace. Her radiant mother stood stiffly beside
him.
There
were tears in her eyes.
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