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Five Things Confessions: The Private School Murders Teaches You About Life

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Five Things Confessions: The Private School Murders Teaches You About Life Death. Money. Drugs. In James Patterson and Max Paetro’s, Confessions: The Private School Murders Tandoori Angel, a 16-year old girl who has to deal with the death of her parents, some of the richest and most powerful people in New York. The people who fed her and her siblings drugs to keep them emotionless. She investigates and finds their murderers which brings her into the world of being a detective, she figures out many other mysteries afterwards. This book takes you on a very exciting and mysterious adventure, one almost no one in real life goes through. People may say that this book doesn’t relate to anyone because of how out there the plot is, but there are many things …show more content…

He dodged traffic, lept over a railing, and then he was with me, right in front of me, smiling his now oh-so-familiar smile. He was exactly as I remembered him. Exactly. “Hey,” he said with a grin. “Hi,” I replied, as casually as I’d done if we’d been meeting after school at the Starbucks on the corner of West Seventy-Sixth Street. 4. Always do what you think is best even if people are telling you to stop. Tandy is a detective, she has been ever since she discovered who her parents killer was. She wants to investigate and find Tamara Gee’s real killer and she also wants to find out who is killing girls in their city. She continues to be a detective and investigate both of these things even though the police don’t want her to, because they think that she will just end up hurting their cases but, she ends up solving both instead. “Any idea why someone would want to hurt her? Caputo asked. We heard more sirens with deeper whooping sounds as the coroner’s van arrived. More cops were getting out of cruisers, stringing a yellow-tape perimeter around the body and shooing the onlookers back. “Everyone liked her,” I said. “I think she saw her killer, though. Maybe she knew

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