

Instant Karma is written from the viewpoint of Pru and we see her struggling with perceived injustices, her anger and her utter dislike of Quint. But why does it keep backfiring when she tries it on Quint?

When Pru accidently falls and hits her head, her life changes when she discovers she now has the ability to cast instant karma on those she perceives have done wrong. Pru is furious when they receive an overall mark of a C and will do anything to be able to do over the assignment to get her expected A – but that may mean having to spend her summer holidays working at the local animal rescue centre with Quint!

Pru isn’t one of the popular kids but she doesn’t care, as long as she achieves top marks and is accepted into her university of choice so she can study business. She is trying to complete her final biology assignment but her lab partner Quint (named after the sea captain from Jaws) has been missing in action for most of the term and is now late for the final presentation. Pru is finishing her sophomore year at the local high school and wants nothing more than to succeed at everything she does. Her parents own a local vintage record shop in their hometown of Fortuna Beach. This is the story of Prudence Daniels, one of five children all named after Beatles songs: her twin brother Jude and younger sisters Lucy, Eleanor and Penny. Instant Karma is the second of her stand-alone novels. Marissa Myer is an American novelist, author of The Lunar Chronicles, and the Renegades Trilogy.
