Good Witch Mirabelle Saintly and Wishmaker’s International have been granting wishes as far back as Cinderella and are now fully computerized. But with the cosmic power shift of the "real" new millennium, Wishmaker’s magic is threatened. By midnight on New Year's Eve Mirabelle must grant Eileen Pringle her wish of true love, or Wishmaker's and all Good Witches will disappear forever. Computer nerd Eileen is determined to make her boss, Brock Van Buren fall hopelessly in love with her. The trouble is, Eileen has all the grace of a wounded goose, and her world is falling apart. Her father has died, her stepmother has kicked her out of her home, and her sexy, stepsister is chasing Brock. Worse, disturbingly handsome fellow employee, Daniel Collins, appears intent on sidetracking Eileen from destiny with Brock. Confirmed bachelor and undercover FBI cyber-agent Daniel Collins is trying to find the person inside Brock Van Buren’s software company who is hacking into government files. He doesn’t count falling for his prime suspect, Eileen Pringle, who insists that her heart belongs to her boss, even though it's Daniel's kisses which are leaving her breathless. Will Mirabelle’s race against time to unite the star-crossed lovers end in tragedy? Or will the Cinderellas of the world continue to find a perfect fit in Glass-Slipper-dot.com?
What if fairy godmothers existed? And they needed to upgrade their services? By starting a website to communicate with their clients more efficiently? And, what if you throw in a "fate of the world" scenario, say Y2K is approaching and all the godmothers will go up in a poof of fairy dust if Eileen doesn't get her wish?
I like the idea but the writing didn't live up to the promise of the story.
This is the kind of kooky storyline that I typically adore. Sadly, the author had to go and add an oh-so-cliche love story so trite I longed for the complexity of the Harlequin romances I used to sneak off of my grandmother's shelves when I was twelve. Even worse, the writing itself was uninspired. The author doesn't trust herself and constantly repeats descriptions and explains things that do not need explaining.
All that said, I did finish it. There were some fun supporting characters and I had fun holding a developmental editing session with the author in my imagination.
I enjoyed this book. I thought it was cute and fun, it was very easy to pick the book up and start where I left off. That said it was also very easy to put down and walk away from it. The love triangle did feel old after awhile and there was not enough of Brock to figure out why she felt the way she did, even she didn't know. I could see her having this crush when she was fifteen and too young to know better, but at her age I feel she should have more depth and be a little more self aware.
It was also fairly easy to see through the mystery to who done it and I do wish there was a little more resolved there. But at least we had some closure as to the will.
This was an excellently written book. It had great spiritual lessons interwoven throughout. A great take on the Cinderella story. I absolutely loved it and would definitely recommend it!