Quite aside from the improper Example Indentation, this example spends most of its text waffling about things other than the trope:
Jail Bait Wait: With the May–December Romance pairing of Rose/Tom, this is something of a given, but McKay handles Rose's Precocious Crush on Tom delicately and Tom's hints of attraction toward her so subtly, causing their relationship to be one of the least Squickiest examples of the trope around.
Oddly enough though, this implication doesn't appear in many of the fanfics in the Casson Family Series archive at FanFiction.Net, although it would make a good plot point in story. But then again, the trope is employed so subtly most people probably aren't even aware of its existence in the books.
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard Feynman
Quite aside from the improper Example Indentation, this example spends most of its text waffling about things other than the trope:
- Jail Bait Wait: With the May–December Romance pairing of Rose/Tom, this is something of a given, but McKay handles Rose's Precocious Crush on Tom delicately and Tom's hints of attraction toward her so subtly, causing their relationship to be one of the least Squickiest examples of the trope around.
- Oddly enough though, this implication doesn't appear in many of the fanfics in the Casson Family Series archive at FanFiction.Net, although it would make a good plot point in story. But then again, the trope is employed so subtly most people probably aren't even aware of its existence in the books.
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled." - Richard Feynman