Meet Ashley Patterson, the brainy, babelicious computer whiz and
confused heroine of Tell Me Your Dreams. Although she has a cushy
job at Global Computer Graphics, a fast-growing start-up in Silicon
Valley, her life falls short of fulfilling. She's lonely, shy, and
absolutely convinced she's being stalked. What's worse, the only
sympathetic ear around is her father, Dr. Patterson, the heartless
heart surgeon, who has the charm of an electric eel and the
compassion of a tarantula. Given her options, Ashley looks to the
heavens for support and offers up an ultimatum to the Almighty:
I"ll make a deal with you, God. If it doesn't rain, it means that
everything is all right, that I've been imagining everything. Of
course, it starts raining buckets just paragraphs later, setting
off a car alarm of an omen about our computer cutie's fate.
Enter Toni Prescott and Alette Peters. They both work with Ashley at Global Computer Graphics, but the similarities end there. Toni is a saucy, British vixen with a penchant for Inteet dating and discotheques. La bella Italiana Alette, on the other hand, is a wannabe artist who prefers quiet, dreamy weekends with beefcake painters. Reminiscent of junior high school, Toni and Alette do their best to keep Ashley out of their cool clique, but find it difficult when a string of murders irrevocably binds them together. Based on a true story and laden with realistic details–not to mention a whopper of an ending–Tell Me Your Dreams is vintage Sheldon. However, there is one necessary caveat: avoid moviegoer types who insist on telling you the entire plot before you have a chance to see it. You should be doing this anyway, but take extra care with this book. Once the surprise ending is blown, so is the fun in reading it. –Rebekah Warren –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Enter Toni Prescott and Alette Peters. They both work with Ashley at Global Computer Graphics, but the similarities end there. Toni is a saucy, British vixen with a penchant for Inteet dating and discotheques. La bella Italiana Alette, on the other hand, is a wannabe artist who prefers quiet, dreamy weekends with beefcake painters. Reminiscent of junior high school, Toni and Alette do their best to keep Ashley out of their cool clique, but find it difficult when a string of murders irrevocably binds them together. Based on a true story and laden with realistic details–not to mention a whopper of an ending–Tell Me Your Dreams is vintage Sheldon. However, there is one necessary caveat: avoid moviegoer types who insist on telling you the entire plot before you have a chance to see it. You should be doing this anyway, but take extra care with this book. Once the surprise ending is blown, so is the fun in reading it. –Rebekah Warren –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.