![]() ![]() Things begin to take slightly shadowy turn, along with Emma’s arrival, however. She is kind but firm, beautiful yet understated in her appearance and an all-round role model for the other women at the school. Emma is academic and social elite at its finest with the accolades, title, accomplished husband and house to prove it. this is, again, expected given the cover and title of the book and also, that lovely reputation Southern California has for being, oh, a little vapid. Much of the girlish tittering is made of school gossip and lusting after the picture perfect life of their new head mistress, Emma. These tiny traumas (career building, promotion seeking, man finding, etc.) are the consuming plot of the first half of the book. ![]() Add in their newly adopted Jersey gal, Lisa, the latest addition to the science department, and you’ll certainly have tales to tell. Well, to be fair, it does start out a bit chickie.įrannie and Jill, accomplished speech staff at a prestigious Pasadena private school, have had their share of drama, each. ![]() What you’ll find inside, however, is a different story. If you take Liza Palmer’s More Like Her at face value, it comes off as an all out chick lit extravaganza. ![]()
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