School Library Journal Review
Gr 8 Up-Seventeen-year-old Penny Landlow was born into the "family business"; her dad oversees a vast empire of illegal organ donation. Patients pay heartily for this life-saving service. Penny lives on a lavish estate that sports top-notch security and hired staff. She has limited interaction with the outside world, which is compounded by her disease; Penny suffers from a rare condition called idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP). Her body destroys its own platelets for no known reason, and the only treatment is healthy blood infusions every few weeks. Her life revolves around her blood tests and infusions. Penny's greatest desire is to go away to college and live like a normal teen, but her doting parents will never allow this. Carter, her older brother, is home from college, along with his trusted bodyguard, Garrett Ward. Garrett's dad is head of security for the business and his three brothers are employees as well. It's assumed that the Ward family will take over the organ business once Penny's father retires. When the Wards are not named as heirs to her father's empire, the action boils over. Her brother, mother, and father are brutally murdered, and Penny is forced into a heart-pounding, adrenaline-fueled race to discover the true murderers and survive the treacherous New York landscape on her own. Penny comes to recognize her limitations and have faith in her ability to make decisions, learning from her mistakes. The plot is contrived in spots, such as when Penny just happens to run into and fall in love with the son of one of the rival organ empires. Loaded with twists and suspense, this is the first in a series, and teens will anxiously await the next book. VERDICT A crime narrative that satisfies a craving for suspenseful romance, entertaining adventure, and edge-of-your-seat survival drama.-Julie Shatterly, W. A. Bess Elementary School, Gastonia, NC © Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Horn Book Review
Penelope, the cosseted daughter of a mob boss in the underground organ-selling business, has a rare and dangerous disease that makes her bruise and hemorrhage easily. When the Family is betrayed, she is flung out of her home and into the dangers of New York City alone. The near-future mob story is well developed and exciting, but Penelope's disease feels extraneous. (c) Copyright 2015. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Many parents are overprotective, but perhaps none more so than the Landlows with their daughter, Penelope, whom they forbid anyone even to touch.They do have good reason for this rule. Penelope suffers from idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, a disease that can result in horrific internal bleeding at even the lightest touch. Complicating matters, the family profession is human-organ trafficking, which, though it can help those in need (and who can pay), is highly illegal and dangerous. When this danger culminates in horrific tragedy, Penelope suddenly finds herself alone in a world she's ill-equipped to deal with. Will she be able to handle real life and even save the man she loves from death? Schmidt offers a modern-day retelling of the "The Princess and the Pea" that attempts to cast the princess in a more proactive, less victimized role than is traditional. Penelope does manage to break free of her delicate-flower mode (with a little motivation from some bad guys), but she suffers so many setbacks and moments of doubt that readers will be forgiven for wanting to hurry up the process. The romance at the heart of the book is a sweet one, if slightly convenient, and offers a pleasant break from Penelope's primary struggle between her past and present selves. A decent girl-power twist on an old fairy tale for thriller lovers. (Thriller. 13-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Penelope Landlow has grown up within the protective bubble of family: the little-f family of her parents and brother, and the big-f Family that makes up the Landlow crime syndicate, which oversees illegal organ donations and transplants. Because of a life-threatening autoimmune disorder, she's considered too fragile to even be touched. Her biggest dreams are to attend a real high school for her senior year and kiss Garrett Ward, her brother's best friend and bodyguard, so when her family is murdered, she has no idea what to do. Waiting for rescue gets old, though, and Penelope finds hidden strength and a steamy new love interest as she searches for the killers. This is a fairy-tale romance with gangster set dressing. The story doesn't properly start until the halfway point, when Penelope leaves the safety of home and meets Char. Readers will quickly identify him as a rival mobster, though it takes Penelope far longer. With some action at the end and Penelope's growing self-confidence, this implausible but swoonworthy story will appeal to romantic-suspense fans.--Hutley, Krista Copyright 2015 Booklist