I read this book about two weeks back. I haven't taken a flashlight and stayed up really late reading for a while. This book had made me do that.
I literally grabbed a flashlight and kept flipping pages until I was done with the book.
It's a light read with 272 pages.
The summary first, then I'll go onto why I chose this book.
Summary: Meet Josephine Foster, or Zo Jo as she’s called in the biz. The best pint-sized photographer of them all, Jo doesn’t mind doing what it takes to get that perfect shot, until she’s sent on an undercover assignment to shoot Ned Hartnett—teen superstar and the only celebrity who’s ever been kind to her—at an exclusive rehabilitation retreat in Boston. The money will be enough to pay for Jo’s dream: real photography classes, and maybe even quitting her paparazzi gig for good. Everyone wants to know what Ned’s in for. But Jo certainly doesn’t know what she’s in for: falling in love with Ned was never supposed to be part of her assignment.
This was very dramatic when I got to Jo going to the retreat. There were so many rules that she was breaking as she took pictures. She was guilty about everything but the job was weighing so many things between her conscience and the money that was going to take her out of being a paparazzo.
She came across a secret later on that will shock her and the reader at the same time.
This book was something I just pulled of the shelf at the library and I loved the cover. You kinda figured out at the same time that they were not talking about shooting stars in outer space, but your celebrities.
This almost-300-page book is cute in a way that it isn't overly mixed with too much girliness because paparazzi in L.A. sure is a tough job.
I literally grabbed a flashlight and kept flipping pages until I was done with the book.
It's a light read with 272 pages.
The summary first, then I'll go onto why I chose this book.
Summary: Meet Josephine Foster, or Zo Jo as she’s called in the biz. The best pint-sized photographer of them all, Jo doesn’t mind doing what it takes to get that perfect shot, until she’s sent on an undercover assignment to shoot Ned Hartnett—teen superstar and the only celebrity who’s ever been kind to her—at an exclusive rehabilitation retreat in Boston. The money will be enough to pay for Jo’s dream: real photography classes, and maybe even quitting her paparazzi gig for good. Everyone wants to know what Ned’s in for. But Jo certainly doesn’t know what she’s in for: falling in love with Ned was never supposed to be part of her assignment.
This was very dramatic when I got to Jo going to the retreat. There were so many rules that she was breaking as she took pictures. She was guilty about everything but the job was weighing so many things between her conscience and the money that was going to take her out of being a paparazzo.
She came across a secret later on that will shock her and the reader at the same time.
This book was something I just pulled of the shelf at the library and I loved the cover. You kinda figured out at the same time that they were not talking about shooting stars in outer space, but your celebrities.
This almost-300-page book is cute in a way that it isn't overly mixed with too much girliness because paparazzi in L.A. sure is a tough job.
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