Three Stars
I don't like that they lie to there parents. If you like books where kids lie to there parents, this book's for you.
The characters are pleasant, for sure, but not singular.
Scarlett's voice was impersonal, and though I liked her on the surface, in the end, she mostly came across as one of those girls in books who thinks she's a writer even though she doesn't, actually, you know, write anything. I'm not asking for a book within a book, but some mention of her plot or characters would authenticate.
Not that parts of it didn't make me laugh, at the time. Sometimes Scarlett or her siblings where unexpectedly hilarious.
The setting is fun, right in the middle of a hotel in new york city, and the snippets for guidebooks give it a layer of truth, even though it's fiction.
Come to your own conclusion.
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