Friday, June 3, 2016

Review: Scarlett Epstein Hates it Here - Anna Breslaw

Scarlett Epstein Hates it Here
Anna Breslaw
Series: N/A
Genre: Young Adult, Contemporary
Publisher: Razorbill
Rating: 1.5 out of 5 stars
Goodreads 

Guys. I was so excited to read this book. Before its release, it seemed to be popping up on everyone's TBR's (Kiersten even featured it in a Waiting on Wednesday post) and I heard tons of good things so I was intrigued. A fanfiction-writing girl who starts writing about her classmates in the wake of her favorite show's cancellation? Count me in!

Unfortunately, it just didn't deliver. I tried hard to be forgiving, to remember this is how some 16/17 year olds are, to pore through the pages of 5-star reviews on Goodreads, wondering why I was one of the three people who felt differently. It was to no avail, as my opinions remain the same.

The book is told in Scarlett's point of view, and reads like an inner monologue or a journal entry. Something I realized early on was that I really did not like Scarlett as a person. Usually, I don't need to like a character to like a book. Sometimes, I love a book even more if the protagonist is awful (not the kind of awful where you lowkey like them but when they're just a bad person used as a vehicle to tell the story). Like, Catcher in the Rye is one of my favorite books, but no one can deny that Holden Caulfield is a little shit and totally full of it; that doesn't stop me from liking the book. This time, though, I couldn't stand Scarlett or her inner monologue narration and because the book was so entrenched in her and her decisions and her thoughts, it definitely made the whole thing less enjoyable.

She's a junior in high school, so that puts her at around 16/17, but the book reads like the voice of maybe a 13-15 year old. I was reminded of the times I look back on my obnoxious high school underclassman days and cringe at how annoying I was. I didn't expect her to be super mature and self-actualized or anything, but I think she definitely should have been a smidge more grown-up as a human.

I think I realized about five pages in that I wasn't going to like her character when she started going on about her lunch table -- the Girl Geniuses, a group she herself isn't a part of, but is allowed to sit with because her best friend (and her only real life friend) is. She says all this negative stuff about them, like how "it's uncomfortable seeing people try that hard" and making fun of this girl's crazy eyes and her 4.0 GPA. She actually tried to be condescending about how some girl had a perfect GPA, compared to Scarlett's own 2.9. It all just felt very weird because her best friend Avery is in this group too -- she is one of these overachievers, one of these people who "run on Adderall and fear." Also, she talks about how no one understands her except her internet friends and her only solace is fanfiction but if she got off her high horse and stopped judging everyone else people would probably talk to her.

And she doesn't just hate on the Girl Geniuses for being smart and having good grades, she hates on literally everyone. She judges her mom for reading popular novels like Jodi Picoult books and Eat Pray Love and for watching rom coms like Bridges Jones's Diary (one of the best rom coms honestly). She freaking says "I'm Anne Hathaway and she's Jennifer Lawrence!" when she can't figure out why a boy likes another girl more than he likes her. She explains that Anne Hathaway is unapologetically herself and people think she's abrasive and don't like her (for the record, I've never heard anyone say anything negative about Anne Hathaway) while Jennifer Lawrence is fake awkward and her PR team tells her to trip and fall and be "real" so people like her because it's manufactured, and so obviously Scarlett is Anne Hathaway and the other girl is JLaw. She makes some comment about something being "the most destructive force for women's body image since Barbie" which is less "judgey" and more Trying Too Hard to Be Relevant (also I'm not trying to start an argument but I don't think Barbie is the most destructive thing like there have been worse you could have picked a better example). On the same note of trying too hard to sounds relevant and feminist and stuff, Scarlett makes a comment about how she doesn't buy bras that fit because of the patriarchy. Like, Im 100% a feminist, but I would not blame the patriarchy because I didn't know how to buy a bra. Check yourself, dude.

I know I've been ranting for the entire length of this review about why Scarlett is not a good character and I haven't talked about anything else, but it's 60% because I have a lot to say about her and 40% because not a lot happens in this book and it's all Scarlett's inner monologue so that is what I am working with. I'm gonna switch gears and talk about what does happen and then go back to hate. As you know, she starts writing fanfiction about people she knows from school because she doesn't actually know how to write original characters (side note: I don't know why she couldn't write about the show even when it ended. Harry Potter ended and I still read James/Lily fanfiction and they were barely in the books). Of course, she doesn't change anyone's names because she's an idiot, and it doesn't end well for her.

The book took forever for anything to actually happen. It was ~200 pages of Scarlett talking about stuff, and then in the last 80 pages, there's a Sad Thing, a Romantic Resolution, a Confrontation With Mean Girl She Wrote About, and the whole fact that she wrote about people from her school kinda just fades away. It was really disappointing.

I also thought not all the characters were fleshed out. Scarlett clearly was, I just didn't like her. Her best friend Avery, though, didn't seem to have much personality. She didn't serve any purpose other than a best friend role, and all we knew about her was that she was smart and by the end had a boyfriend. Gideon, her own love interest, was a little better, and we knew he liked comedy and was rich, but they always just talked about being misfits and liking comedy and writing when they were together. It didn't get much deeper. The two best characters were Ruth and Dawn, and Ruth isn't even in the whole book. Ruth is her 73 year old neighbor who she befriends because she's ~quirky~ but she's really cool and definitely made the book palatable. Dawn is her mom, who she calls by her first name for a reason that we don't know. It's not because they aren't close, because it seems like they are. It's not because she's too cool for that, because the coolest mom in the world, Lorelai Gilmore, even has her daughter call her Mom, so that can't be it. And she calls her dad "Dad." We just have to roll with it. Anyway, Dawn is funny and a little bit on the fritz and I just really liked her, she seemed sweet.

The whole book is interspersed with the fanfiction Scarlett is writing about the real life people, and while it's a little better to read than her inner monologue, it's still not great. Like, you know how Rainbow Rowell ended up writing the fanfiction from her book Fangirl into a full length novel? I doubt anyone is gonna ask Anna Breslaw to do that anytime in the near or distant future. Speaking of those fanfiction bits, every time she posts one, we see a snippet of her instant messages with her fanfiction writer friends and she gets so mad every time they don't interpret it the way she wants them to, like when they start shipping the "wrong" ships or calling her self-insert character a Mary Sue (which she literally is, that's the definition, a self-insert).

There were a few parts of the book that weren't so bad to read but those were the parts where Scarlett kept her monologue to a minimum. She was really just so sanctimonious. She said stuff about how she felt like "my entire high school experience felt like being the only one who already knows the end of a movie, when everyone else you're going with is excited to see how the movie will end. Spoiler alert: a 20 percent discount at Target" (oh yeah, she seems to think everyone who leaves her high school ends up working at a grocery store forever as if she's from small town in the midwest but she's literally in central New Jersey and as someone who lived there for 15 years I can assure you most people don't do that). Or she had some revelation about how The Great Gatsby makes Daisy look like "a flake" but from her point of view, he's a "flashy, patronizing asshole." As if everyone who ever read the book hadn't already figured that out!

And she would talk constantly about how she was just so funny but she was really not that funny. There were a few gems in the book where I admit her thoughts were pretty amusing, but for the most part she tried way too hard to put on a funny front. In one scene, she comes to the table and says "Yes, this is my cheap-ass poor person lunch," I announce when I sit down with my tray, and they laugh, like they do every time." Tell me that doesn't like a pity laugh because if you don't laugh it'll look like you're taking the "poor" thing too seriously.

By the end, I felt like she hadn't gone through enough character development. Sure, she changed a little, but she's still annoying and judgey, she just doesn't write about real people as much and found a new TV show to watch (speaking of, her wailing over the cancellation of the show seemed really melodramatic. You know how teachers tell you "show, don't tell?" It was a lot of telling us she was sad but not too much showing).

I'm sorry I've just been going on and on, and I'm sorry if you read all this. If you skimmed, the gist is: the book's pacing was way too off, Scarlett as a character was too Awful, and the book wasn't as funny or feminist as it's being lauded for being.

My opinion is clearly in the minority so I won't hold it against you if you go read it, but I saw some pitches saying it was "Amy Schumer meets Rainbow Rowell" and another saying it was "modern day Harriet the Spy" and another comparing her to Judy Blume, and I can say with certainty it's not even a little close.

- Noor

Do you read any fanfiction?
Let us know in the comments!

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Previously on WLABB: April & May 2016

Previously on We Live and Breathe Books is an end of the month wrap up post. Previously allows us to recap all our posts from the past month and discuss what's going on in our lives, including what books we're reading, any fun things we've been doing, and a TBR for the next month. Our inspiration for this meme comes from Midnight Madness Newsletters created by Melanie at YA Midnight Reads.

Posts from April & May 2016

Review: Tell Me Three Things - Julie Buxbaum
Waiting on Wednesday: Scarlett Epstein Hates it Here - Anna Breslaw
Review: I'll Give You the Sun - Jandy Nelson
Waiting on Wednesday: Harry Potter and the Cursed Child - J.K. Rowling, Jack Thorne, & John Tiffany
3rd Blogiversary Giveaway (Open through June 8th)
Review: The Unexpected Everything - Morgan Matson
Review: Into the Dim - Janet B. Taylor

Keeping Up with the WLABBers 

Kiersten

My April was pretty crazy given all the end of the school year work and assisting lighting design on a show - I kind of stopped being a person for a while. But May was a lot more fun and relaxing!

One of the biggest highlights of May was attending BookExpo America and BookCon in Chicago! I was pretty exhausted since I was still finishing up a final paper during my first days at BEA, but it was a lot of fun! I'll be doing a recap of my time there soon.

Since then, I've been relaxing, catching up on some TV, and reading! I'm excited to read a lot this summer, especially with all the awesome books I got at BEA, and I'll also be working on making costumes for a show I'm working on in September.

Because of all the school work, I had to take some time off from reading in April. I still got to read some awesome books though! I started out April by finishing Into the Dim, which I reviewed yesterday. I really enjoyed the time travel aspect in that book! I FINALLY read Illuminae, which was so incredible, and then after BEA, I read Gemina, which was ALSO INCREDIBLE. I'm dying to read book three even though it's a long ways away (insert sadface here). I also finally started the Grisha trilogy, and I've finished Shadow and Bone and Siege and Storm thus far. I cannot believe I waited so long to read this series - it's so good! My final read of May was Museum of Heartbreak, which I just finished and absolutely loved. It was kind of heartbreaking (as implied by the title) but also super sweet. I'll be reviewing that soon!


For June, I want to balance out my TBR with some BEA books as well as some ebooks I have. For BEA books, I have The Loose Ends List, The Girls, and And I Darken. I have eARCs of The King Slayer, which I'm really excited for since I loved The Witch Hunter (review here), and Little Black Dresses, Little White Lies. Lastly, I want to finish the Grisha trilogy with Ruin and Rising.


Noor

I lowkey don't even remember what I did the past two months because I'm so bad at placing time frames on events in my life (I can usually remember years, but months is way too specific). I feel like I went to the doctor a lot in April, not because I was sick like in the coughing sense, but because my brain is highkey tryna ruin my life and I gotta work on it so I saw a few doctors, got an MRI, scheduled some more doctor time, and lied to my sister about the bruises from my blown veins and told her I got in a fight. The usual.

In May I ate a lot of ice cream because my brother started working at Coldstone and he didn't have his own car at first so we'd pick him up and buy ice cream while we waited but then he bought a car so I don't swing by around there as much. Also I got to play with really cute cat at my friend's grad party which was probably the highlight of my year.

I mostly spent the month writing quotes from Hamilton with a quill and ink into a leather journal (really sloppily because if you think my handwriting is bad with a normal pen, try reading it with a quill) because my friend sent me said quill and ink as a birthday present five months after my actual birthday (December 23rd if u wanna hmu with gifts) and it was really exciting for me.









I couldn't go to BEA & Bookcon because my mom thought I wasn't medically sound enough so that was kinda sad but this past weekend I did go to Baltimore and met up with my best friends for this convention. It was such a wonderful weekend and honestly was not enough time with my Best Friends, but we made the most of it, going to brunch a few times. Baltimore's Inner Harbor area has the best cute, aesthetically pleasing, food spots. It was like heaven for us and we spent more time photographing our food and each other and cute angles than we did eating our food -- which was hella delicious too -- because of how nice it was. I even put my plate on a pile of rocks at one place for the aesthetic and I refuse to be ashamed. I think wearing heels the whole weekend was a bad idea in retrospect but also I think I will wear heels the whole weekend again next year because of who I am as a person. Also, I think I probably should have slept more than negative five hours the whole weekend, but again, I am a flawed person. Also, the second night, I would have slept significantly more if we all hadn't been woken up by the loud peal of an alarm telling the entire Hyatt to evacuate because of a fire at 5am (it was okay, it wasn't a real fire, but we still had to leave and the elevators were obviously not gonna work, and we were on the 12th floor). I always ramble a lot in these so I'm gonna cut myself off here but I wanna show you guys some pictures from Baltimore. I actually have a lot of really cute pictures but I'm planning to slowly Instagram them so I can't just post them here and ruin the surprise but here are a few that I either don't think I will Instagram or don't mind posting here as well in their unfiltered glory.

         
Follow me on Instagram (@looonylovegood) to see which pics were so cute I couldn't even post them here. Also, I cut all my hair off into a tapered bob and dyed it purple. Moving on for realsies. 

So I've been preoccupied by my general anxiety and hopes that I'll get sucked into the void and all that that stuff so it's been a slow time for reading. I read the Hamiltome when it came out and just died over it. I have a journal where I just have various lists and so I have about five billion pages of notes to myself about which annotations I'll want to look back on for future reference. I read The Night Circus right after because quite a few people recommended it to me a few years ago and I bought it but never read it so it was about time, and that was it for April. I started off May with Morgan Matson's The Unexpected Everything, which I reviewed very positively, so you can find my expanded ravings on that. After that, I read So Sad Today, which is actually a collection of personal essays, which might not sound like some people's cup of tea, but honestly it was so good and raw and well written. If you don't already follow the Twitter account @sosadtoday, the author runs the account, and the book reads like the tone of the tweets, so I was into it, and some of you could be too. Moving on, I didn't actually finish Scarlett Epstein Hates it Here yet so I don't wanna say anything because sometimes you like a book at first and then by the end totally hate it, but I brought it as my car book for Baltimore but didn't read it because I get a little carsick when I read but I still wanted to read it so I started when I got home and couldn't sleep because I slept in the car.


I only put three books because I'm really bad at planning what I want to read ahead of time so it's not that I only want to read three things all of June, but that these are the three books I'm surest I want to read, other than that it's up in the air. With A Court of Thorns and Roses and Illuminae, it's the same deal: the books came out a while ago, everyone raved about them, I kept planning to read them and I own them and everything, but still didn't, and now everyone is reading the second books, so I figure it's time to finally read the first before I get too far behind. In contrast, I only just head about This is Where it Ends when I saw a post about top recently released YA books and I was intrigued by the premise (and cover and title) so I hope I can read it this month.



I hope everyone is enjoying their summer! xoxo, gossip girl

Amrutha

So I haven't posted in like basically forever because I am the worst. Sophomore year of college was so much more work and stress and a general struggle than anything else and I barely got time to read, much less write about what I did. I missed BEA & BookCon because I was moving out and taking finals and generally living my sophomore slump life, but next year it'll be back in New York and I'll be able to go without a plane ride. To be honest the last year kind of flew by and I don't have any major life updates other than that I decided to double major in Comparative Literature because reading makes me so happy and I might as well study that while I can. In other news, I'm supposed to get a puppy soon so if that happens expect that me and pup will review something together! Otherwise, I am still the potato that I once was back when I posted fourteen years ago. I'll be posting more over the summer so hopefully I can redeem myself a little bit! Hope everyone's summer has been fab so far or that school and jobs and things are going well. Drop your life update in the comments so we can talk about being potatoes together or I can be inspired by your lifestyle choices.


Yo, Not if I See You First was the bomb. Expect a review on that soon because genuinely, one of the best books I have read in a long time. It was not only diverse without being too obvious that it was diverse but also was written SO WELL. I reread Hello, Goodbye, and Everything in Between, which I originally gave a 5 star rating here. When I reviewed it I guess I was being a bit sappy, but when I reread it I didn't even recall having read it the first time. Seriously, I forgot that I read it, so maybe the fact that it wasn't that memorable takes away from the 5. I think when I first read it I was at a point in my life where I was so full of sap and saw that within the book and empathized so deeply with it, but now upon reading it I was like "THIS IS SO MUCH FLUFF STOP." Looking back, its one of those books that you need to read at the right time. One Man Guy was okay as books go -- it had some interesting points but to be honest, the main character kind of annoyed me so I was never too into it (I'm usually not someone who gets bothered by how characters act unlike our girl Kiersten, but for some reason with this book it really bothered me). P.S. I Still Love You was, in my opinion, weak in comparison to the first book in the set, To All the Boys I Loved Before -- Jenny Han has been one of my favorites since she came out with Shug years and years ago, so this book was still good to me. The last book of Cammie McGovern's that I read, Say What You Will (reviewed here) was written well, but I hated how the book ended in terms of plot. I liked this one a lot more, but again, it just felt like something was missing at the end in terms of plot, not really sure why -- you can see Noor's review of A Step Toward Falling here! I finally finished Dumplin' which I started literally in like September, and I loved it even more than Noor and Marlon did. Finally got to read a bit more in the last couple months so I appreciate that a lot, and I can't wait for the summer!



I only really put four books here even though I'm sure I'll read more, as I always read more over the summer. The reason for that is because these are the books that I want to read literally now -- tbr's are hard for me because I don't really follow them, I just pick books and read them when I /feel/ I should read them. Quick anecdote: someone gave me a copy of A Thousand Splendid Suns (WHICH IS AMAZING GUYS) in May a couple years ago. All summer they asked me if I had read it yet and eventually asked for the book back because I hadn't read it. I finally decided to sit down and read it a couple months later, and it made a more profound impact on me because I feel like I waited until the right time to read it. In my opinion, like with Hello, Goodbye, and Everything in Between, a lot of books are meant to be experienced at the right time for you specifically, and if I can tell that about a book, I'll wait until I am overcome with the desire to read it. I'm really excited about these books though, I just started Illuminae and the hype surrounding it seems true so far. I'm also really excited for Walk the Edge, because I really enjoyed the first book in Katie McGarry's Thunder Road series. Also, ya'll know my JLA obsession so of course, I have that on here too.


What have you been up to last month?
Let us know in the comments!

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Review: Into the Dim - Janet B. Taylor

Into the Dim
Janet B. Taylor 
Series: Into the Dim, #1
Genre: Young Adult, Science Fiction, Fantasy, Historical Fiction, Romance
Publisher: HMH Books for Young Readers
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Goodreads 

Thanks to Houghton Mifflin Harcourt for the eARC I received via NetGalley!

Hope has been homeschooled her entire life - she has a photographic memory, and her mother has schooled her a very specific way so that the knowledge wouldn't overwhelm her. When Hope's mom dies in an earthquake, her aunt reaches out to her and Hope ends up going to visit her mother's family in Scotland. When she gets there, she finds out her mother isn't actually dead - she's trapped in England in the time of Eleanor of Aquitaine - and Hope needs to travel back in time to save her.

The way the time travel aspect was explained and portrayed was absolutely wonderful. I really enjoyed the detail Janet B. Taylor included with the science aspect behind the time traveling, as well as how much work went in to preparing to travel to a different time. From the proper way to walk, to the proper dialect, to the correct clothing - everything was so precise and well thought out.

I really enjoyed the time period of Eleanor of Aquitaine. I had no knowledge of this period prior to reading this book so I can't really say if any of the historical basis was accurate (I'm hoping that it is) but the political elements of the time were really interesting to learn about.

Hope wasn't a particularly outstanding heroine, but I enjoyed seeing her interact with her newfound family. These people took her in and made her a part of their group without even really knowing her. Given Hope's sheltered past, she was never able to make friends or interact with anyone her age. Seeing her friendship with Rachel, Collum, and Phoebe.

The thing about Into the Dim that was most unexpected to me is that most of the book happens in present day. While this makes sense given that Janet B. Taylor needed to set up the background of the plot, have Hope travel to Scotland, and show the training involved before time traveling, I really wish there had been more of the historical aspect of the book. Everything in the first half of the book felt really elaborate and thoroughly explained, but some of the action in the second half while they were time traveling felt rushed. I wish the things that happened had just been stretched out a bit more - fleshed out with more detail.

Overall, Into the Dim wasn't an outstanding book, but I really enjoyed it while I was reading it. From the time traveling element to the promise of a bigger conspiracy in future books, Into the Dim was worth the read!

- Kiersten

If you could travel back in time, when would you travel to?
Let us know in the comments!

Saturday, May 21, 2016

Review: The Unexpected Everything - Morgan Matson

The Unexpected Everything
Morgan Matson
Series: N/A
Genre: Young Adult, Contemporary
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Goodreads 

Hello home slices! I know it has been many moons since I've last seen you but I'm back reviewing Morgan Matson's new book, which was the cutest blend of built-up romance and strong friendships and family relationships and totally hit the mark with the whole summer vibe (which is also how we felt when we triple reviewed Matson's book, Since You've Been Gone, last June).

I actually bought and finished it a few days after it came out (if you go on my Twitter you can find the exact date), so I've had almost two weeks to process the book and everything I felt, but I still had a lot of thoughts and emotions about it after I finished, so if I gloss over anything you really liked/hated/thought was relevant to you/want to talk about, it's probably because 1. I'm very disjointed and it got lost in all the thoughts I was trying to convey or 2. I felt like I was rambling on or talking too much but either way, if you want to talk about something that I didn't (or did), just comment/tweet @ me/email me/carrier pigeon and I would love to discuss!

So the book is about Andie, a Congressman's daughter who's used to planning her life down to the T, but finds her summer unexpectedly open and free, full of nothing but a dad who's staying at home for the first time -- on a leave of absence -- and her group of best friends.

One of my favorite things about this book is how well Morgan Matson does characterization. I think it's one of her strongest talents because it's what I love most about Since You've Been Gone, and I'm dying to read her other books to fall in love with those characters as well.

We meet Andie's best friends -- Toby, Bri, and Palmer -- and slowly, throughout the book, we're shown the way they function, as a unit, as friends to one another, to other members in their group. Honestly, the relationship between her friends (not even between Andie and her friends but between her friends themselves) was my favorite part. It was so beautiful and nuanced and so subtly threaded itself into the narrative. Like, technically her friendships didn't influence her work plot or her boy plot or her dad plot that much, but I would want to read this book 200% less if her friends weren't in it.

Honestly, I just love contemporary YA books that have strong friendship narratives because a lot of the time the romance plot takes the lead and you find the protagonist, once past the whole meet-cute stage, spending all their time with the love interest, forgetting they have other friends, but this was SO not like that. Even once she got to know Clark (the love interest), she took him to meet her friends and he had some awkward encounters with her dad, and he even formed this super tight bromance with Palmer's boyfriend, Tom. Speaking of Tom, another kinda small thing I liked was that even though Palmer, Toby, and Bri are her three best friends and her main squad, as she states multiple times (I don't think she ever says squad, but ya know) they still incorporate other people into their group. Like, Tom is Palmer's boyfriend, but he's part of their group, and Wyatt is this dude they know who spends summers in Connecticut (where they live) and he's always invited to hang out with them, and they go to parties where they're familiar with other people. And sometimes they hang out not just the four of them; sometimes it's just Palmer and Andie, or Toby and Bri. It's cool to mix things up, it makes the characters seem real. So many books establish a friend group and never explore outside of it. I don't condemn those books or anything because it's easy to get lost within the characters you create and not bring in smaller, side characters, but Matson did a great job establishing her own.

Since I mentioned Toby and Bri, I wanna talk about them a lil. So in the book the four of them are a squad but Tobri (that's their names together if you didn't catch that) are hella best friends. They've been bffs since pre-school and brought the other two in at later points so it makes sense (I lowkey thought Tobri were gonna end up together by the end of the book and I will not tell you if my prediction came true because that is a spoiler but just letting you know my thoughts). Their friendship was the most interesting to me because they have their own little plot that I can't say much about really without spoiling it, but seriously, Morgan Matson really commits to writing real, honest friendships and situations. I felt the depth of the whole thing down to my core and felt myself relating to it even though I'd never been through their specific situation. I honestly think that anyone with a best/close friend now or ever to is going to be able to relate because it's such a strong depiction of the two characters and their relationship that even though not everyone can relate in a super direct way, they can still feel and understand the weight of it.

Moving on, I've gotten pretty far into the review without talking Boy, and I loved the boy so I'm gonna shift gears. I mentioned Clark a little bit in a previous paragraph but didn't elaborate so here y'all go. He's cute and nerdy and a writer and likes fantasy novels and owns shirts with TV and movie references on them that Andie doesn't get but that Tom and Bri do (Star Wars and Doctor Who mostly). Also, he likes really spicy food and honestly, I felt myself lowkey falling for him as the book went on. Something I really loved was that Andie and Clark's attraction and relationship was built up throughout the book, slowly and powerfully.

Andie was used to scoping out cute boys and dating them for three weeks, max, so when she met him as her dog walking client (yeah, there are dogs in this books, can it get any better?) and they had a few cute but awkward encounters they decided to go on a date. But rather then being entranced at first conversation, it was rocky, and Andie thought it was over, and I'm not gonna go into details, but he's the love interest so clearly things change, but it takes a while to get from "terrible first date, I'm never seeing him again" to breaking her three week boyfriend rule and he was such a well-written, complex character, like all the others. Also, I related to him a lot as well. Andie could be a little unintentionally callous at times because she genuinely didn't understand but I felt a lot of the things Clark was feeling.

Anyway, Matson did such a great job writing that everything felt so real, which I know I already said, but I keep wanting to reiterate because as I was reading it honestly felt like I was a step away from making this place and these people tangible. I spoke a lot of character depth but it also had a lot to do with her writing as well and how so much of it was so striking, whether from being something so specific and connectable to one's own experience or from bringing out something new in her characters. Like, in one scene, she describes:

"We walked in silence, and I noticed that he was right by my side, closer than ever. Even without turning to look, it was like I could feel his presence next to me, aware of every step he was taking. Our hands were both down by our sides, and they were so close to touching. I could feel the tiny breeze made by his arm as it swung, the night air cool on my skin."
They aren't even holding hands but it feels so intimate. Also, it feels so familiar, the whole presence-next-to-me stuff. I feel like I've felt it before. In the same vein, we see her dialogue with her friends and it feels familiar too because it is -- figuring out who's free to meet for coffee, picking on each other for taking too long to get ready or having bad taste in guys, giving each other weird dares for almost no reward.

Okay, I realize I've written a lot already so I'm gonna quickly mention a few things I wasn't a huge fan so I can wrap things up. Sometimes, Andie's narration sounded a little awkward and it it messed with the flow but honestly, this was only really in the very beginning and it went away. But she did a whole bit about receiving "text chains" from her friends and her wording felt a little outdated compared to the execution of the book and then there was a scene where she was really fascinated with laptop decals and made it sound like they were a new and wild thing (I mean she said she'd seen them before but like it was still a little weird). Also, at one point, the girl who owned the pet care place she worked at used the word "former" (like former vs latter) and she was taken aback because she didn't expect her to use proper language but I'm not so sure that's all that proper of a term? It was, once again, a little bit weird to read. Basically, she occasionally sounded a little off but it was so few times it was really not a big deal I just felt like mentioning that if I had any wishes for improvement, it would be that her voice was a little more refined. (Also, this one doesn't influence my rating or anything because I realize it's 100% nitpicking and I'm sorry, but she was wearing a tweed skirt in the beginning and I feel like even though she's a ~Congressman's Daughter she does not have to do that. Like, Malia and Sasha Obama are the President's daughters and they're stylin' all the time. Ok sorry about this.)

I'm sorry about how long this is and I'm ending this soon but before I do, here are some things I wanted to mention but didn't in convenient bullet point form:

  • Someone had a Giving Tree laptop decal and I just really want to mention that I hate The Giving Tree with all my heart and with my entire earthly existence ok thank you goodbye
  • There were some really cute Since You've Been Gone cameos and I genuinely squealed when I saw them
  • So there was this whole thing where Andie and Clark made up these two characters called Marjorie and Karl and they just talked about them and their stories and made it up as they went along and that was my actual favorite part 
  • I didn't mention Andie's relationship with her dad and how it progressed throughout the book but that was so well done and I appreciated it a lot. I think Morgan Matson really has a talent and a skill for developing relationships and characters at the right pace because even in a 500 page book I felt like everything fit just right 
  • Connecticut is not on the way from New York to New Jersey (they do some driving later) but I can't drive and I suck at directions so I'm going to pretend this makes sense and go with it 
  • There were lots of emojis in this book and I loved it and also I think true friends would never make their friend give up her emoji usage (but a month-long emoji only bet is fair game)
I'm done now. I will see you soon (hopefully). Peace out cub scouts. ✌🏽


- Noor

If you were an emoji, what would you be?
Let us know in the comments!

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

3rd Blogiversary Giveaway!!

If you couldn't tell from the title, today is We Live and Breathe Books' 3rd Blogiversary!!




Woooo!!! And, in even better news, we're celebrating with a giveaway! (Which you probably already figured out because of the title. Basically most of this post is just a reiteration of the title with gifs.)


Since it's our 3rd Blogiversary, we'll be giving away three of the awesomest (in my opinion) ARCs that Kiersten picked up at BookExpo America this year! (BEA recap post to come sometime this month.) The books are...



Three lucky winners will get their choice from above, in the order in which they are drawn (first chooses, then second, then third). All you have to do to enter is fill out the Rafflecopter below. The giveaway is open US only, unless you are willing to pay the shipping, and is open through June 8th. You must be 13 or older to enter or have a parent enter for you. The winners will be selected shortly after and will have 48 hours to respond before a new winner is selected.


But before we get to the Rafflecopter, the WLABBers just want to say thank you so much to every one of our wonderful followers. You guys are the real MVPs! Here's to another awesome year!!



a Rafflecopter giveaway