Synopsis
“What?”
“I don’t know if we can be friends,” I say before taking a bite.
“Because I don’t love pizza?”
Just because she's famous doesn't mean she's happy.
Freshman
Lianne Challice is known to millions of fans as Princess Vindi. But
sometimes a silver screen sorceress just wants to hang up her wand, tell
her manager to shove it, and become a normal college student. Too bad
that’s harder than it looks.
She’s never lived a normal life. She
hasn’t been to school since kindergarten. And getting close to anyone is
just too risky — the last boy she kissed sold the story to a British
tabloid.
But she can’t resist trying to get close to Daniel "DJ"
Trevi, the hot, broody guy who spins tunes for hockey games in the
arena. Something's haunting his dark eyes, and she needs to know more.
DJ's
genius is for expressing the mood of the crowd with a ten second song
snippet. With just a click and a fade, he can spread hope, pathos or
elation among six thousand screaming fans.
Too bad his college
career is about to experience the same quick fade-out as one of his
songs. He can't get close to Lianne, and he can't tell her why. And the
fact that she seems to like him at all? Incredible.
Buy Links
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Fifteenth-Minute-Ivy-Years-Book-ebook/dp/B015HKCEYC/?tag=sarinabowen-20
Excerpt
Lianne Challice is chatting me up.
As I fetch the pizza I ordered from the window, I try to decide
whether or not I’m going insane. Maybe all the stress in my life has
finally cracked me.
But no. When I deposit the pie on a table, her big eyes cut from the
jukebox over to me, before darting away again. She is so freaking cute
and so feminine that it’s making me crazy. Her mouth is like a little
red candy that I’m dying to taste. And who has teeth that straight? She
intimidates the fuck out of me, to be honest.
I make another trip to the pizza counter for paper plates and
napkins. Usually we just grab slices off the tray like animals. But
tonight I’m trying to be classy. The idea makes me snicker to myself. As if.
Impressing Lianne Challice isn’t something I’m capable of. But I’m
having fun trying. And there hasn’t been a whole lot of fun in this year
for me. So that’s something.
Years from now I’ll look back on this night and laugh. Guys, did I ever tell you about the time I chatted up a movie star? I mean, my father is still telling people about the time he sat one table over from Tina Fey at Nobu.
Lianne sneaks another glance in my direction and I beckon to her.
“Have a slice?” If she wants one, now is the time. In a minute my
brother and his teammates will fall on the pizza like seagulls.
“Thank you. I guess I should. I didn’t make it to the dining hall tonight.”
“Your enthusiasm for Capri’s pizza overwhelms me,” I tease. “Aren’t you a fan?”
She slides a slice onto a paper plate, considering the question.
“Pizza is like a nineties hit. Pretty good, especially if that’s all
there is and you’re hungry.”
My own slice stops halfway to my mouth and I laugh. “Seriously?”“What?”
“I don’t know if we can be friends,” I say before taking a bite.
“Because I don’t love pizza?”
I shake my head. “Who doesn’t love pizza? It’s, like, a basic human
desire.” I cram a bite into my mouth to prove my point. Smooth, right?
She bites her bottom lip, and I realize I’d rather have that for
dinner. “It’s okay. But it’s mostly just something you eat when you’re
in a hurry or need to feed a crowd on the cheap.”
“Ah, I see,” I say when I can speak again. “The problem is that you haven’t had any great pizza. You’re a freshman, right? You don’t know all the glory that is Harkness pizza. Have you been to Gino’s Apizza?”
Lianne shakes her head. “I don’t think so.”
“She doesn’t think so,” I scoff. “Baby, if you’d had great pizza,
you’d remember.” And now I sound like a real perv, but Lianne Challice
is smiling at me, watching me with her big doe eyes, and I feel it like a
drug. “They make everything from scratch. Even the sausage. We’ll go
together, so I can prove my point.”
Annnd I think I just asked a movie star out on a date. Here comes the crash and burn.
First her eyes widen just a smidge. Then two pink spots appear on her
face, one on either cheekbone. “Well, it would be a shame to live in
this town and never know its true pizza greatness.”
I replay that sentence in my head and realize that she didn’t turn me down. “True,” I agree. “Do you think Thursday would be a night to experience pizza Nirvana?” I’m overselling the hell out of Gino’s now, but it’s working for me.
She gives me a serious frown, and I’m hoping she’s not busy on Thursday. Because I have back-to-back hockey games to DJ on Friday and Saturday. “Thursday it is. I shall prepare to be amazed.”
Review
This is only the second book I've read of this series (there are five,) and I can't wait to read the previous ones because I absolutely love Sarina and the way she manages to tell her stories.
Sarina brings Hollywood into college life with Lianne Challice. Her movies have made her famous but inside she's just a shy girl trying to fit into a world where sometimes she's a hero and others she's just the subject of jokes.
Daniel Trevi is a good guy, from a good family, but a few months ago he made a mistake that came back to hunt him and he's been paying for it dearly.
As Lianne and Daniel get to know each other we see the difference they both start making in each other's lives. She starts opening up, blossoming into a more confident and take charge girl, and Daniel starts believing a bit more in himself and finds in Lianne the support he needs to continue fighting for his innocence.
I adored these two characters, I remember the difficulties and struggles of those first years of college and Sarina portrays those perfectly. She also digs into the "glamorous" life of a Hollywood star showing us that is not all fun and games, that fame has an ugly side behind those bright lights.
Their relationship doesn't happen without hurdles, but when two people are committed and truly care for each other, they will do whatever it takes to surpass those.
Sarina's writing is riveting and she keeps the reader falling in love not only with the characters (main ones as well as secondary ones,) but also with a well crafted, compelling story.
Sarina brings Hollywood into college life with Lianne Challice. Her movies have made her famous but inside she's just a shy girl trying to fit into a world where sometimes she's a hero and others she's just the subject of jokes.
Daniel Trevi is a good guy, from a good family, but a few months ago he made a mistake that came back to hunt him and he's been paying for it dearly.
As Lianne and Daniel get to know each other we see the difference they both start making in each other's lives. She starts opening up, blossoming into a more confident and take charge girl, and Daniel starts believing a bit more in himself and finds in Lianne the support he needs to continue fighting for his innocence.
I adored these two characters, I remember the difficulties and struggles of those first years of college and Sarina portrays those perfectly. She also digs into the "glamorous" life of a Hollywood star showing us that is not all fun and games, that fame has an ugly side behind those bright lights.
Their relationship doesn't happen without hurdles, but when two people are committed and truly care for each other, they will do whatever it takes to surpass those.
Sarina's writing is riveting and she keeps the reader falling in love not only with the characters (main ones as well as secondary ones,) but also with a well crafted, compelling story.
About Sarina
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