The show must go on takes on a whole new meaning for one single mom in a witty and emotional novel by the USA Today bestselling author of I Thought You Said This Would Work .
Poppy must decide whether to keep her mouth shut, as she\'s always done, or with the help of a scruffy dog, show the moviemakers that they need her unglamorous ways, whether the superstars like it or not..
What she thought was a way to secure a future for her daughter becomes a spotlight illuminating the facts: Poppy is out of her league among the divas of Tinseltown.
When Poppy stumbles upon corruption, she relies on everyone underestimating her to discover who\'s at the center of it, a revelation that shakes her belief in humanity.
Floundering and overlooked, Poppy has one ally: Allen Carol, an ill-tempered movie star taken with Poppy\'s unfiltered candor and general indifference to stardom.
As a single mom, she\'s rarely had time for watching movies, she doesn\'t sew, and she doesn\'t know a thing about dressing the biggest names in the business.
Even so, This midwesterner has a lot to learn about the fast and loose world of movie stars, iconic costumes, and back-lot intrigue.
It\'s a bold move to pack her bags, keep secrets from her daughter, and head to Los Angeles, but Poppy\'s a capable person--how hard can a job in wardrobe be? It\'s not like she has a choice; her life couldn\'t get any worse.
After her accountant absconded with her life savings, newly bankrupt Poppy is on the verge of losing her home when an old flame, now a hotshot producer, gives her a surprising way out: a job in costumes on a Hollywood film set.
It seems lately that Poppy Lively is invisible to everyone but the IRS.
The show must go on takes on a whole new meaning for one single mom in a witty and emotional novel by the USA Today bestselling author of I Thought You Said This Would Work