The Dachshund Wears Prada by Stefanie London
How can you resist that dog?! I'm a cat person and
wanted to read this book as soon as I saw the cover. This book is out this week
on May 3rd and I know everyone loves a sneak peek so keep reading for an
excerpt of this wonderful book!
Book Summary:
How do you start over when the biggest mistake of your life has more than one million views?
Forget diamonds; the internet is forever. Social media consultant Isla Thompson learned that lesson the hard way when she went viral for all the wrong reasons. A month later, Isla is still having nightmares about the moment she ruined a young starlet’s career and made herself the most unemployable influencer in Manhattan. But she doesn’t have the luxury of hiding away until she’s no longer “Instagram Poison.” Not when her fourteen-year-old sister, Dani, needs Isla to keep a roof over their heads. So she takes the first job she can get: caring for Camilla, a glossy-maned, foul-tempered hellhound.
After a week of ferrying Camilla from playdates to pet psychics, Isla starts to
suspect that the dachshund’s bark is worse than her bite—just like her owner,
Theo Garrison. Isla has spent her career working to make people likeable and
here’s Theo—happy to hide behind his reputation as a brutish recluse. But Theo
isn’t a brute—he’s sweet and funny, and Isla should not see him as
anything but the man who signs her pay cheques. Because loving Theo would mean
retreating to his world of secluded luxury, and Isla needs to show Dani that no
matter the risk, dreams are always worth chasing.
three
Isla trudged along the
hallway toward her apartment, high heels swinging from her finger. Usually she
wouldn’t dare go barefoot on public carpet—especially not in a building of
questionable standards, like this one. But after walking six blocks to get home
in the pretty, stiletto-heeled death traps, her feet had officially given up
the ghost.
Besides, foot hygiene was
the least of her problems. With another rejected job application—this one
coming through before she’d even made it home from the interview—she had bigger
things to worry about.
Isla unlocked her front
door and stepped inside, her lips quirking at the familiar sight. Her little
sister, Dani, was standing next to the wall, one hand resting on a makeshift
barre crafted from a shower curtain rod and some wall brackets they’d found at
the dollar store. She was dressed in a plain black leotard and a pair of pink
ballet tights with a hole in the knee. Her battered pointe shoes were frayed
around the toes, though the ribbons were glossy and new, stitched on with the
utmost care.
Classical music blared
from the stereo and Isla hit the pause button. “What have I said about
disturbing the neighbors?”
Dani paused mid-plié. “If
you’re going to do it, do it properly.”
“That’s not what I said.”
She shot her sister a look, trying to ignore how her leotard was digging into
her shoulders. It was clearly a size too small because the damn girl was
growing like a weed. At fourteen, she’d already surpassed Isla in height.
“Oh, that’s right.” Dani
grinned. “You said that about schoolwork. But, to be fair, ballet is even more
important than schoolwork, so…”
“We’ll agree on that when
you can pay the bills with pliés.” Isla hung her keys on the hook by the door
and dumped her purse onto the kitchen counter.
“Working on it.” Dani
continued warming up, her pointe shoes knocking against the floorboards. “How
was your day?”
Ugh. You mean, how were
the three dozen rejection letters and this last interview, which was clearly
only for curiosity’s sake because the recruiter straight up laughed the second
I left the interview room?
“It was…fine,” she said,
without much commitment.
In reality, it was
anything but fine. What had her old boss called her? Oh, that’s right:
Instagram poison.
“You told me once that
saying something is ‘fine’ is no better than saying it’s ‘purple pineapples.’”
Dani dropped down from her relevé and frowned. “What happened?”
What hadn’t happened?
Isla pulled a bottle of
wine out of the fridge and poured her-self a glass. She’d been rationing it,
since the only stuff that was left after this was a box wine of unknown origin.
“Amanda lost her contract with that makeup company and her movie is flopping.
She sent me an angry email today.”
“Whatever happened to all
publicity is good publicity?”
“It’s a myth. Turns out
some things are career killers.” Isla took a gulp of the wine. “And now I’m that
woman who filmed a Disney princess vomiting all over herself.”
After the live video had
been splashed across the internet and featured on network television, Isla had
swiftly been fired from her job as a senior social media consultant with the
Gate-way Agency. All her freelance clients had dropped her like a hot potato,
too. Now, anyone who searched Isla’s name got page after page of the same
thing: vomit girl and the person who was too dumb to stop recording.
Hence the growing pile of
rejected job applications.
“I take it the interview
didn’t go well?”
Isla cringed at the
concern in her sister’s voice. Most fourteen-year-olds were worrying about
frivolous things, like which shade of lip gloss was the most on trend or how to
craft the perfect TikTok dance routine. Hell, she would argue that’s the stuff
they should be worrying about. Not whether they were going to have a roof over
their heads.
“No, it didn’t,” Isla
admitted. “But honestly, I’m not sure I would have wanted to work there
anyway.”
It was a total lie.
Isla was ready to take
anything at this point. It was humiliating to be begging for jobs she could
have done ten years ago with her eyes closed, only to be rejected because the
recruiters had found someone “with more experience.” Umm, what? In other words,
she’d been officially blacklisted from the social media industry.
“How come?” Dani walked
over to the kitchen, her arms swinging gracefully by her sides. Her dark hair
was in a neat bun on top of her head, tied with a piece of leftover ribbon from
her pointe shoes. “Were they not very nice?”
“Not really.”
Dani came up to Isla and
put an arm around her, stooping so she could lean her head against her big
sister’s shoulder. Some days it felt like it was them against the world. Given
they didn’t actually know where their mother was these days—and they hadn’t
seen either one of their dads in God only knew how long—they really did have to
stick together.
Isla remembered the day it
all happened—the eve of her twentieth birthday. Their mother had announced she
was eloping overseas with a boyfriend she’d known less than a month, and they
hadn’t seen her since. Apparently motherhood was a temporary commitment, in her
eyes. That left Isla responsible for the well-being of another human, and more
terrified of the future than she’d ever been.
Six years later, Isla had
built a life for them both. She’d fostered and financed her half sister’s
dreams, built up her own dream career and done it all while hiding how often
the numbers weren’t in their favor. But the older Dani got, the more keenly she
observed what was going on.
“Maybe you can ask the ballet school for our money
back,” Dani suggested quietly.
Her spot had been secured
for the summer intensive ballet camp months ago, before Isla’s job situation
had fallen apart.
“I know it was really
expensive,” she added.
Isla felt tears prick the
backs of her eyes, but she refused to let her sister see even a sliver of her
emotion. It was her job to be a pillar. To be the strong one. To be the positive
mother figure neither of them ever had.
“Dani, I would sell my
right kidney if it meant you could go to ballet camp.”
“I’m pretty sure that’s
illegal.”
Isla snorted and wrapped
her sister into a big hug. Like al-ways, she smelled of oversweet vanilla
perfume and mango-scented shampoo. She would do anything for this kid. Anything
to make sure Dani grew up knowing that dreams were worth chasing, and that
family came first no matter what.
“And how do you know so
much about black market organ sales?” Isla raised a brow and Dani laughed.
“CSI.”
“Ah, of course.” She
laughed. But when Dani pulled back, Isla noticed her sister’s
characteristically carefree attitude was hidden under the worry swimming in her
blue eyes. Isla hated seeing that. “Why don’t we go to Central Park, huh? We’ll
take your phone and I can get a few shots of you for your Instagram account.”
“Really?” Dani’s eyes lit
up.
“Sure. Just let me get
changed.”
“I promise not to make you
take a hundred photos this time.” Dani grinned and did a little pirouette in
the kitchen. “Not even half that!”
“Don’t make promises you
can’t keep,” Isla shot over her shoulder as she headed into her bedroom. “Trust
me, I know where you get those perfectionistic tendencies.”
The second Isla closed her
bedroom door behind her, she slumped against it and deflated like a balloon the
day after a birthday party. Outside, the city roared with life. Sirens and
horns, music blaring from the open window of another apartment, the shrieking
laughter of people enjoying the early evening. She gazed out of the window, her
eyes catching on the usual things that faced their cozy (read: cramped) place.
There was a glimmer of light as the sun reflected off glass panes, and the
zigzag of a fire escape from the building opposite them. The same three
apartments always had their blinds wide open—either inviting voyeurism or not
caring enough to prevent it.
Sometimes she wondered
about their lives. Had they been stuck and struggling at some point like her?
Had they lost faith in themselves and the world?
After she got fired, Isla
had assumed it would all blow over if she kept a low profile and didn’t make
matters worse. But then Amanda’s movie tanked and all her sponsorships fell
through, and people stopped taking Isla’s calls. Even when she’d tried to laugh
the whole thing off as a “Miley Cyrus exercise” her contacts had frozen harder
than an Upper East Sider’s Botoxed face.
New York could be like
that—when you were successful it felt as though the sun was made of gold. And
when you fell from grace, you hit the concrete so hard you shattered every bone
in your body.
How much longer was she
going to be able to keep faking that everything would be fine? Rent was due
next week and the final payment for Dani’s elite ballet camp had come out of
her account a few days ago. Isla’s eyes had watered at the amount. But Dani had
worked so hard, practicing every day and pushing herself to the limit to beat
out the rich kids with their prestigious coaches and private lessons and their
lifetimes of opportunity.
How could Isla pull the
rug out from under Dani like that? What kind of lesson would that be teaching
her?
“You’ll figure this out,”
she said to herself. “Someone will hire you.”
After all, she had to make it work. Because letting her sister down was not an option.
Excerpted from The Dachshund Wears Prada by Stefanie London,
Copyright © 2022 by Stefanie Little. Published by arrangement with Harlequin
Books S.A.
Author
Info:
Stefanie London is a USA Today Bestselling author of contemporary romance. Her books have been called "genuinely entertaining and memorable" by Booklist, and her writing praised as "elegant, descriptive and delectable" by RT Magazine. Originally from Australia, she now lives in Toronto with her very own hero and is doing her best to travel the world. She frequently indulges her passions for
lipstick, good coffee, books and anything zombie related.
Keep in touch on social media
Author Website: https://stefanie-london.com/
Instagram: @stefanielondon
Facebook: @London's Lovelies
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8138287.Stefanie_London
Thank you to HQN Books for including me on the virtual
tour for this book!
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