


For a girl with few ambitions Jeanie's new life is at once both terrifying and strangely liberating, and in Xander's company she blossoms into a woman she hardly recognizes. Jeanie believes she is content - a small town girl happy running the Cafe Cinematique with her grandmother-but with Xander's arrival her life takes an unexpected turn and she finds herself unwillingly thrown into the limelight.

When darling photographer of the Sydney fashion scene Xander Fitzgerald takes a shot of Jeanie Baker, his Iso settings hit red alert and no one's life is ever the same again.

"There Are Things I Want You to Know" about Stieg.Téa Cooper's writing and story is inspirational for women everywhere. Jeanie struggles with self confidence, but in Passionfruit and Poetry, she learns to love herself for who she is.and that's just another reason why I love this story: The characters' personal growth and progression.įor women, this book is wonderful for teaching you that there's always someone who will only find the perfect things about you and love you despite your faults. It's a perfect summer read with it being light, sweet, sentimental and romantic. I would (and will) read anything written by Téa Cooper now because I've fallen in love with her writing and stories. She doesn't find anything spectacular about herself, especially with her overly curvy hips, track record with love and traumatizing past, but Xander Fitzgerald (the photographer and Jeanie's love interest) thinks she's the most gorgeous creature on earth.and he falls in love with her. But Jeanie catches the eye of a handsome, charming and famous photographer and he proposes that she enter her seductive, fingernail-biting, café picture in a magazine cover girl contest.and he falls in love with her. So when a hoard of professional photographers and camera crews comes to her grandmother's café to do a promotional shoot, it's no exception. Jeanie Baker (the main character of Passionfruit and Poetry) was incredibly strong, relatable and lovable. Passionfruit and Poetry by Téa Cooper is the very definition of a "feel good book." It is short and sweet, but don't let that fool you, it's also packed full of love, lust and betrayal.
