We met Lianne in the previous book, and she already went through a remarkable transformation. They think that because I’ve done a lot of smiling into the camera, that’s all I can manage. The Ivy Years series set high standards for this one, and I wasn’t disappointed, not even one bit. Once again Sarina Bowen hits us with her originality, and characters that you can’t help loving. And the fact that she seems to like him at all? Incredible. He can’t get close to Lianne, and he can’t tell her why. Too bad his college career is about to experience the same quick fade-out as one of his songs. With just a click and a fade, he can spread hope, pathos or elation among six thousand screaming fans. There’s something haunting his dark eyes and she needs to know more.ĭJ’s genius is for expressing the mood of the crowd with a ten second song snippet. And getting close to anyone is just too risky - the last boy she kissed sold the story to a British tabloid.īut 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. She hasn’t been to school since kindergarten. 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. Freshman Lianne Challice is known to millions of fans as Princess Vindi.
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