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| Such a Rush |
Four years later, as a high school senior, Leah is a first-rate young pilot, earning a job offer to fly for Mr. Hall. However, his unexpected death leaves Leah in a bind. The business is left to his two teenage sons: perfect Alec and bad boy Grayson. While Leah has harbored a secret crush on Grayson since she first met him, she is not sure that getting involved with a short-lived business (as she is sure it will be with teenagers running it) is a good plan. However, Grayson soon blackmails her into helping for reasons of his own, entangling Leah in family drama she cannot hope to understand.
Having never been in Leah's situation, I still found her easy to relate to within the prose. I cheered her on as she strove to reach her dream. I cried in frustration with her as she met road block after road block. And I wanted to hit Grayson every time she did when he was too boneheaded to know what was staring him in the face.
That being said, it was not a perfect book. Naive as my notions are, I often felt a little uncomfortable at what were serious adult moments left in the hands of teenagers. I could understand, on the one hand, that all three of them were forced to grow up at young ages and were forced to make adult decisions. I thought, however, that we should strive to keep teenagers teenagers. The relationship between the two protagonists seemed way too intense and physical for my tastes.
Nevertheless, I would recommend this book. The fast pace and snappy dialogue kept me turning the pages.

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