"Humorous satirical amateur sleuth tale"
When she gains weight becoming a size 12 and nears thirty,
her boyfriend Jordan Cartwright switches to a size 2; her
recording studio Cartwright Records (owned by Jordan's
dad) assumes her fans at the mall will desert her because
she became too "normally" fat dump her. However, the
biggest hurt is that her mother and her manager embezzled
all the money she earned as a singer to live the good life
in Argentina while Heather Wells needs to find work to
survive. Heather obtains a job as an assistant dorm director at
Greenwich Village's New York College. The work is
relatively easy mostly keeping raging hormones out of the
dorm though her coeds are smart, sneaky and sly when it
comes to gender warfare. However, everything changes when
the corpse of a female student is found at the bottom of
the elevator shaft in the residence hall Heather
oversees. The NYPD detectives quickly assume it is an
accident due to surfing the elevator; Heather's boss
Rachel gleefully accepts their ruling. Heather thinks
murder occurred. When no one listens to her including the
centerfold private investigator Jordan's brother, Carter,
she begins to investigate on her own as another student
dies leaping across elevators. Meg Cabot's satirical look at what a person does when
their fifteen minutes of fame ends is a humorous satirical
amateur sleuth tale that young adults and older readers
will appreciate. Obviously Heather is the focus of the
amusing story line as she tries to solve what she assumes
is homicide and everyone else concludes is a youthful
accidental foolish tragedy. Size 12 is the right size for
a fine Manhattan murder mystery. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted December 15, 2005
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