Maya’s struggle to secure a scholarship for an elite urban‑design program reveals the systemic obstacles that maintain the status quo. When her application is initially rejected, the admissions officer cites “fit” and “cultural alignment” as reasons—coded language for class and racial bias. Maya’s eventual acceptance, achieved through a daring public presentation of a sustainable housing design that integrates low‑rise vernacular architecture with high‑rise efficiency, underscores Tomforde’s argument that true upward mobility must be built on inclusive design rather than exclusionary aesthetics.
Liz Tomforde is not a huge conglomerate publisher. She is an indie author who relies on royalties from Kindle Unlimited (KU) and book sales. When you download a pirated copy from VK, you are directly taking money out of her pocket. For every "free" download, hours of her work go uncompensated. Mile High By Liz Tomforde Vk
The central conflict is delicious: Stella is Zane’s boss. The power dynamic is tricky, the professional stakes are incredibly high, and the chemistry is immediate. Tomforde doesn’t rely on cheap misunderstandings; the obstacles here are real—career reputations, workplace ethics, and the pressure of being a woman in a male-dominated industry. Maya’s struggle to secure a scholarship for an
: Zanders uses a "bad boy" image as a defense mechanism to hide deep-seated abandonment issues stemming from his parents. Liz Tomforde is not a huge conglomerate publisher
Tomforde, however, injects a critical voice through the character of “Rico,” a community organizer who leads protests against the construction of the “Nimbus Tower”—a planned megastructure that would displace thousands of low‑income families. Rico’s chants—“We don’t need a higher skyline, we need a wider horizon!”—serve as a refrain that challenges the notion that height alone equates to progress.
by Liz Tomforde is the first book in the Windy City series , focusing on the high-tension relationship between a professional hockey player and a flight attendant. It currently holds a 4.02/5 rating with over 580,000 ratings on Goodreads . Plot Overview
The novel follows , the notorious "bad boy" defenseman for the Chicago Raptors, and Stevie Shay , a no-nonsense flight attendant assigned to the team’s private jet. Zanders is used to being the player everyone loves to hate, often spending as much time in the penalty box as he does with a new woman on his arm. However, his usual charms fail to impress Stevie, who is determined to keep her job professional and avoid another relationship with an athlete.