Ashley, the president’s daughter, is sick of the Secret Service following her every day. She wants to fall in love with someone who will take her away from her life of constant surveillance. When Nick, a new bodyguard, is assigned to accompany her on vacation, she is captivated by his intense gaze, and as the vacation goes on, Ashley is no longer able to ignore the way Nick’s dedication to her safety makes her heart flutter. However, when Nick coldly rejects her feelings, Ashley flees his protection in shock and that’s when bullets start to fly.
'The political thriller of the decade' Lee Child 'A bullet train of a thriller' A.J. Finn 'A first-rate collaboration... Engrossing from page one' David Baldacci 'This book moves like Air Force One.
"-Kirkus Reviews "A fascinating story."-Booklist "Loaded with historical details...the novel rings true and the people come to life.
Sixteen-year-old Meghan Powers' happy life in Massachusetts changes drastically when her mother, one of the most prestigious senators in the country, becomes the front-runner in the race for United States President.
Reproduction of the original: Clotelle, or the Colored Heroine by William Wells Brown
Ellen Emerson White started writing about Meg Powers in The President's Daughter and continued in White House Autumn and Long Live the Queen (coming in 2008 from Feiwel and Friends). When Ellen is not writing, she's watching the Red Sox.
Most of them were about the guy—or even just his grin, like some deranged Cheshire Cat—but falling, seeing people she knew get killed, and being trapped in places were regular themes, too. Her appetite was pretty much gone and every day ...
The President’s daughter has been kidnapped by Jewish terrorists. With the world watching, Sean Dillon is called in to find her, before the Commander-in-Chief is forced to make a decision which could rip the world apart.
From New York Times bestselling author Mariah Stewart comes a novel of sexy romantic suspense for fans of Nora Roberts, Catherine Coulter, and Karen Robards.
After ten months of living in the White House, seventeen-year old Meg Powers knew she should be used to the pressures of life in the spotlight—but she wasn't.
Clotel; or, the President's Daughter