Perfect Opposite by Zoya Tessi
Publication date: May 18th 2014 (paperback)
Genres: Contemporary, New Adult, Romance
Cover Artist: Deranged Doctor Design
Synopsis:
Their wishes were simple and modest. Fate had other things in store though, and she can be a real bitch sometimes.
- All he wanted was to get the job done and somehow to endure those long months playing nanny to a spoiled little rich girl. Without strangling her with his bare hands in the process. Well, it is going to be much easier said than done.
- All she wanted was to escape the past and live like any other nineteen-year-old girl. Her plan definitely didn’t include the arrogant, tattooed savage, with his awful mohawk hair and lack of social graces, whose only mission was to stick real close and mess up her life.
But, people aren’t always what they seem to be, are they?
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Trailer:
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Interviewer: Hello, Sasha. It’s
nice to have you here today.
Sasha: I’m glad to be here. Thanks for having me!
Interviewer: I'm sure our readers can't wait to get to
know you better, so can we start with you telling us something about you that
no one else knows?
Sasha: Oh, you’re starting with
the tough ones, I see that. ( smiling ) I'll have to think about that.
Interviewer: Please, take your time. It can be anything,
maybe something from your childhood?
Sasha: Well, there are some
things from that time that I haven’t told anybody. Like the big clock in the
hallway I broke once.
Interviewer: You didn't!
Sasha: I'm afraid I did. I was
around five, running through the house and playing around, when I saw that it
was dinner time. I really didn't want to stop playing, so I climbed up on a
chair, opened the clock face, pulled off the hands and stashed them in the
nearest drawer. I felt sure at the time that I’d be saved from having to eat
green beans for dinner.
Interviewer: You sure were
resourceful. And you knew how to tell the time when you were just five?
Sasha: Of course. Vova thought
me.
Interviewer: Your father's
employee Vova?
Sasha: I've never seen Vova as
just employee. He’s more like favorite uncle of mine, even though we aren’t
really family.
Interviewer: You’re close?
Sasha: We were very close when I
lived at my father's place. He was my hero and he always saved me from trouble.
When I got up to any mischief, I’d always run to his room and hide there. Like
when I took sand from behind the shed and spread it all over the hallway floor.
Interviewer: Why on earth did you do that?
Sasha: I’d watched some cartoon
about Indians, and wanted to see if I could read tracks. I was sure I was going
to be a hunter when I grew up, and I wanted to practice my tracking skills. I
was around seven then.
Interviewer: If I understood well, you didn't have close
connection to your father even then. What about your mom?
Sasha: She was very young when
she married my father and I always had impression that she was more like a
sister to me than mother. But, when I think of her now, I think she wasn't
mature enough to be a mother.
Interviewer: Why do you think that she wasn't mature
enough? She wasn't responsible, or...?
Sasha: She was… extreme. In
every way. Sometimes, she reminded me of a beautiful wild animal that got
trapped and was forced to live in gilded cage. Unlike me, since I’ve always
lived like that, my mom had been raised without any restraints and it was
really hard for her to get used to having bodyguards following her everywhere.
Interviewer: I suppose it was
very hard for you too, living like that, being treated in a different way to
your friends. What was the hardest part?
Sasha: Holidays, definitely. I
always dreamed of going to the seaside or visiting other countries with my
friends, but I was never allowed. Don't get me wrong, I know it was all for my
own good, but even though I wasn't exactly unhappy, I wasn’t filled with joy
either.
Interviewer: And what is your
idea of perfect happiness?
Sasha: Being able to decide, in
the moment, to go somewhere for a weekend and just packing up your things.
Doing that without looking over your shoulder to see if someone’s following
you, or having the idea that someone might try to kidnap you round the next
corner.
Interviewer: Do you think you’ll
ever be able to feel that way? Completely free…
Sasha: Probably not. Habits are
really hard to overcome. ( smiling ) But
I am really happy now.
Interviewer: And what’s the
reason for that bliss? Or should I ask ‘Who?’ … ( laugh )
Sasha: I think you know the
answer very well. He came into my life like a storm. An unstoppable hail storm.
It was enough for him to look me once with that icy gaze of his, so that I felt
he’d poured all of his coldness right over my head and
made a total mess of my life. But it seems like even the thickest of icebergs
can melt, given time.
Interviewer: From what I know,
he’s a difficult man to be around.
Sasha: I would say extremely
challenging. I have an urge to kill him in cold blood at least once per day.
Interviewer: Have you tried? (
arching eyebrows )
Sasha: Many times, but he’s so
damned agile. He dodges my every strike.
Interviewer: Lucky him. (
laughing )
Sasha: So far… My aim’s getting
better every day.
Interviewer: And do you think
that you two are a good match?
Sasha: The worst! It's like
putting two crazy, egocentric roosters in the same room. We can't help trying
to strangle each other. At first I was sure we were completely contradictory
personalities with nothing in common. But… in time I realized that I was wrong.
We’re more similar than I thought, but I’d never admit that in front of him.
Interviewer: How so?
Sasha: We both had the same fear
- letting another person inside those defensive walls we built around us, to
make them important to us. For Alex, it was the fear of having feelings for
someone who he’d eventually need to let go. For me, it was the fear of watching
people I loved getting killed.
Interviewer: But you overcame that fear of connecting with people. How?
Sasha: Hmm… there wasn't any
conscious decision like: “OK, from today I’ll let him be something more to me“,
you know. It was more like: “Oh, shit.
This isn't happening!” ( laughing )
Interviewer: Were you scared when you realized that?
Sasha: To my core, yes. To be
honest, Alex can be a really scary guy sometimes, and realizing you’re in love
with someone like that, makes you seriously question your sanity.
Interviewer: He didn't look very scary to me. I mean, OK, he’s pretty huge and
those tattoos definitely don't make him look cuddly, but he doesn't look like a
serial killer either.
Sasha: Hah! You’ve never seen him
trying to strangle some random guy who dares to look at me the ‘wrong’ way.
Interviewer: He's rather possessive, I see.
Sasha: Like a dog with a bone.
It's not like he tries to control me or anything, just… he doesn't like seeing
good-looking guys around me. Usually, he doesn't say or do anything and
pretends that he doesn't even notice them, but I can see it in his eyes - that
urge to grab me and drag me back to his cave. (laughing) Like a kid who doesn't like to share his toys
with the other children. It’s funny, really. And to be completely honest - it bothers me less then it probably should. I
guess I feel flattered.
Interviewer: And what about you? How do you react when you see girls flirting
with him? I suppose it happens a lot.
Sasha: All the time, but I've
found rather productive strategy for those situations. And, it never fails.
Interviewer: Oh? Would you share it with us? I'm sure it would come in handy
for our readers.
Sasha: Sure. It's really simple.
Whenever I see a girl flirting with him, I just put on my brightest smile and
make she hears me when I say: “Honey, your parole advisor just called. Better
call him back or they’ll haul your ass back to jail for another ten stretch.”
Interviewer: Well, that would do the trick.
Sasha: It does, every time.
Interviewer: Thank you so much, Sasha. Unfortunately, our time is up. Is there
anything you’d like to tell our readers before we finish?
Sasha: Don't be afraid to take
risks and follow your heart. Most of the time you’ll end up hurt, but those few
times when you don't – they’re worth it all.
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AUTHOR BIO:
A teenager in an adult's body. A rebel in the guise of an ordinary citizen. A lady with very unladylike language. A dreamer with a rational mind. A woman born into the wrong era, she still believes that chivalry's a feat to define the perfect man.
Zoya spent years doing volunteering work all across Europe, from cleaning school basements in Northern Russia to excavating Stone Age artifacts in Euskadi (the Basque country) and renovating castles from the middle ages in Southern France. She always dreamed of working with 'Doctors without borders' somewhere out in Africa, but ended up doing an 'ordinary job' in one of the smaller European countries.
Her greatest passion is devouring each and every book that comes within her reach.
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GIVEAWAY:
Thanks for the giveaway!
ReplyDeleteMims
I've not of this book or author before, but it sounds like something I would enjoy. I really like the cover too! Great post!
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