You can take the girl out of Brooklyn, but can you take Brooklyn out of the girl?
Lorraine Machuchi has held on tight to her Brooklyn home, and to Tommy, the neighborhood guy she's been pining over for years. But the very guy she tossed everything away for just told her he'll never wind up with her--a girl who's not going anywhere.
That's the kick in the pants she needs to cross the bridge to Manhattan, where she starts coloring hair at a swank salon. There she meets a new and fascinating species: The Park Avenue Princess. Sure, their $400 cashmere sweaters, charity balls for poor girls with small boobs, and 'sexy' yoga are a bit over-the-top for someone like Lorraine, but sometimes even a Brooklyn girl can learn to love her own inner princess.
“If you liked ‘Mean Girls,’ you’ll get a kick out of Brodsky’s book.”
—Farrah Weinstein, New York Post
“Princess of Park Avenue is a delicious self-indulgent treat right up there with a leisurely soak in an aromatherapy infused bubble bath with scented candles…It would be cliché to say that Princess is a ‘good read’ but truth be told, it’s not only good, it’s fabulously fantastic.”
— Karen Marie Shelton, HairBoutique.com
“Daniella Brodsky…charms us with her second novel…Princess of Park Avenue is an entertaining and amusing book that will remind any of us who have find ourselves lost in a relationship with a man that the real ‘us’ still exists and we only have to look in order to find her.”
— Amie Taylor, Bookreporter.com
“OMG!!! I LOVED IT!!! I think I read it in 3 nights, and drove with it in my purse, reading it at red lights. I have not had a book like that in some time.”
—rosie-brown-eyes.blogspot.com