Michael Ledwidge is perhaps best known for being the coauthor of some of James Patterson’s novels. In The Girl in the Vault, however, he writes alone and hits a home run.
Faye Walker is a young college grad who scores an internship in a prestigious Wall Street financial firm. As the pick of the litter, and equally brilliant and beautiful, she’s destined for the one open job offer at the firm … until another intern employs a variation on the oldest profession in the world to win over the boss and get the job.
As they say, “Hell hath no fury like a scorned woman.” While that proverb typically refers to love, it applies equally to business. And, Faye’s out to prove just that.
Ledwidge’s fast-paced novel spins a tale of Faye not just getting even, but getting rich in the process. As you follow her brilliant plot, good luck trying to keep from turning page after page!
For pure entertainment, I highly recommend this book.
Reviewed March 2024
Michael Ledwidge is perhaps best known for being the coauthor of some of James Patterson’s novels. In The Girl in the Vault, however, he writes alone and hits a home run.
Faye Walker is a young college grad who scores an internship in a prestigious Wall Street financial firm. As the pick of the litter, and equally brilliant and beautiful, she’s destined for the one open job offer at the firm … until another intern employs a variation on the oldest profession in the world to win over the boss and get the job.
As they say, “Hell hath no fury like a scorned woman.” While that proverb typically refers to love, it applies equally to business. And, Faye’s out to prove just that.
Ledwidge’s fast-paced novel spins a tale of Faye not just getting even, but getting rich in the process. As you follow her brilliant plot, good luck trying to keep from turning page after page!
For pure entertainment, I highly recommend this book.
Reviewed March 2024