

She has a huge crush on her boss and although her clumsiness around him might sound cliche', with China it's not. (Thank you, Tiffany!) She knows she's different and she doesn't apologize for it. She's not the stereotypical heroine and I absolutely LOVE IT. Intelligent, quirky-she wears glasses and T-shirts that celebrate the many fandoms she belongs too. Basically, he's my dream man.Ĭhina Mack-I absolutely love her. He's a genius who started working for the government in his teens, then started his own company in his twenties, but he's also on the top of the "sexiest men" lists.

We get that with Jackson Cooper, the head of Cysnet, the company that China works for.

To me, a man's intelligence rates above bulky muscles-but an intelligent man with a great body is like ice cream with cake and some whipped cream too. But this book is worth breaking my norm.įirst, I have to say I LOVE smart heroes. If you've seen my bookshelf here, you know I rarely write reviews. For the first time ever, she’ll have to follow her instincts, rather than logic, if she’s going to survive.

China suspects she’s being followed and isn’t sure whom she can trust. Quickly the Cysnet assignment becomes disconcerting-and then downright scary-as key staffers turn up dead. And then there’s her sexy but oddly unsettling new neighbor, Clark… Her sixteen-year-old runaway niece suddenly arrives in town, begging to move in with China. A computer prodigy who landed a coveted programming job at the cutting-edge tech company Cysnet before even graduating from MIT, China is happiest when following her routine: shower before coffee, pizza only on Mondays, bedtime at ten thirty sharp.īut then things start to get a little…unpredictable.įirst Jackson Cooper-Cysnet’s rich, gorgeous, genius CEO-assigns China to a dangerous and highly classified project for a government defense contractor. Brilliant, quirky twenty-three-year-old China Mack is totally satisfied with her carefully ordered, data-driven life.
