At the beginning of the novel Kate was very antisocial. She did not interact very much with others except for the exception of her very close friends. After she moves in with the Coopers Kate in suddenly the source of many people's attention, she is campaigning with her father, swarmed by paparazzi, and she is on TV. Along the way Kate finds that she, although she thought it was impossible, found herself rather use to the new commotion and the cameras that followed her almost everywhere she went. Later her father tells her that she reminds him of himself, “Somebody who would stick up for his friends, even if it was risky.”. …show more content…
Kate denies she has and feelings for Andy, but her aunt Penny who cared for her after her mother's death knew her well enough to know that she had feelings for him. The author also uses the order of events to create tension when Andy is accused on television of tricking Kate into giving him information on her father's campaign. Kate was furious with Andy as well as her father because she also believed that he had did not had to be her father. Kate decides to go back home and it is unclear whether she will