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sarahelizasmith's review against another edition
emotional
funny
lighthearted
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? No
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.75
eh24's review against another edition
5.0
I- I’m speechless. I don’t know what to say about this book... besides the fact that it rocked (obviously). So... yeah. This was a great book. The end.
~ Cherry
P.S. This book was a whirlwind of emotions. Also, I suggest reading Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda before this one. Have fun reading!
~ Cherry
P.S. This book was a whirlwind of emotions. Also, I suggest reading Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda before this one. Have fun reading!
heathermassareads's review against another edition
4.0
Leah is different. She is pessimistic. She is terrified of what people think of her.
During Simon vs..., you assume Leah is put off by Abby and Nick because she has a crush on Nick...and here we learn that we have read that situation wrong. Things are different than that. Leah is different than that.
I really liked this book. Leah is a much less likable character than Simon, than Molly in The Upside of Unrequited, BUT she is still amazing - smart, trying to be unapologetic while being super apologetic, tough.
It's a different story. Leah thinks she is brave, but it takes her the whole book to be brave, and that's hard. It was funny and sad and everything that life is.
During Simon vs..., you assume Leah is put off by Abby and Nick because she has a crush on Nick...and here we learn that we have read that situation wrong. Things are different than that. Leah is different than that.
I really liked this book. Leah is a much less likable character than Simon, than Molly in The Upside of Unrequited, BUT she is still amazing - smart, trying to be unapologetic while being super apologetic, tough.
It's a different story. Leah thinks she is brave, but it takes her the whole book to be brave, and that's hard. It was funny and sad and everything that life is.
nyazari's review against another edition
2.0
i think leah was more confused than i was throughout this book.
lizaddie13's review against another edition
4.0
God, I love Leah. She’s such a tragic bisexual who constantly gets in her own way and her happy ending is just the most important thing in the world to me. And I would never have expected that ending when I started this book, which is just all the better.
This book does encounter the same issues I’m having with a lot of YA like this, because I do think the constant pop culture references date the story in a way that I don’t like. But I still feel like there’s a difference between this and The Hate U Give, and I think it’s that LOTO relies on the reader knowing and understanding all the references ahead of time (Drarry, etc.) whereas THUG laboriously over-explains. And maybe that’s just my preference, because I do understand the references.
In any case, I’m going to miss the Creekwood gang a whole lot. I feel very close to them and their high school experience feels very real and beautiful to me.
This book does encounter the same issues I’m having with a lot of YA like this, because I do think the constant pop culture references date the story in a way that I don’t like. But I still feel like there’s a difference between this and The Hate U Give, and I think it’s that LOTO relies on the reader knowing and understanding all the references ahead of time (Drarry, etc.) whereas THUG laboriously over-explains. And maybe that’s just my preference, because I do understand the references.
In any case, I’m going to miss the Creekwood gang a whole lot. I feel very close to them and their high school experience feels very real and beautiful to me.
thattheatrekid's review against another edition
emotional
funny
lighthearted
reflective
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.75
I liked this but not as much as Simon. Leah was so incredibly incredibly relatable but also frustrating. The story also seemed to drag and the pacing was weird, like for 100 pages they hyped up the road trip and the actual trip was only like 2 chapters. I did like the representation. I wish Leah’s perfectionism was explored more and that she would have grown in that area
manuinthealps's review against another edition
4.0
DIOS NO PUEDO CREER LO MUCHO QUE AMÉ ESTE LIBRO.
Leah era mi personaje favorito del simonverse así que me la pasé fangirleando con este libro.
NADA LO AMÉ NO SÉ QUE DECIR.
Es increíble lo fácil que es leer algo que te identifica tanto, y Becky Albertalli es una de las pocas escritoras que lo logra conmigo, así que gracias a ella por esta maravilla.
Leah era mi personaje favorito del simonverse así que me la pasé fangirleando con este libro.
NADA LO AMÉ NO SÉ QUE DECIR.
Es increíble lo fácil que es leer algo que te identifica tanto, y Becky Albertalli es una de las pocas escritoras que lo logra conmigo, así que gracias a ella por esta maravilla.
mrsara's review against another edition
3.0
UPDATE: I don’t know, the more time I spend away from it, the less I like it. I just really didn’t enjoy Leah’s personality or being in her head at all. 3 stars.
I'm essentially the most indecisive person currently alive on Earth, so this is really no shocker, but I'm struggling to decide on a rating for Leah. Becky Albertalli is a fantastic writer of diverse and realistic teens. They take AP classes, they're involved in extracurriculars, they're multidimensional, they worry about and talk about and visit colleges (which is a huge piece of high school life that is so often missing in YA). Her characters are extremely relatable with their social media and their humor and their precarious balance of cynicism mixed with melancholy in regards to high school and what it means to be leaving it. I struggle to relegate this book to my "4 star books" because there is so much about this novel that is done exceptionally better than that of lots of my other 4 star books. And yet.
I think the problem is that this was not the story I wanted to read. Simon and Blue (so I don't unwittingly spoil anyone who hasn't read Simon) are genuinely some of my favorite characters in all of literature. I adore them. If Albertalli had written 300 plot-less pages of them being a mushy couple over senior year, I would've smiled the whole way through and given it an easy 5 stars because that's the kind of reader I am with them. But that's not what happened. Instead we got Leah, who, although sweet at times, was really more complain-y and obnoxious to me. She continually made decisions that I struggled to support, especially because most of the conflict seemed a little forced and self-created, and even the romance felt a tad unrealistic. Like Simon and Blue had conversations. Leah sort of just said Abby was made of light every three pages (hyperbolic, but not by much in my opinion). Also, it was kind of too long for me? Honestly, I often think this with books I slam through in a day (because a lack of breaks and extended exposure to characters can make a story become very old very fast), but there were a handful of times Leah's narrative felt pretty repetitive. Her almost-exclusively negative attitude was tiring, and unnecessarily so for that matter.
The representation was great, as expected with Becky Albertalli. I liked how Leah's being bi wasn't some major source of conflict, she just was. The family dynamic Leah had was also interesting and as a whole she was definitely a much different perspective from Simon's to read from. As usual, I tend to dwell on what I didn't like more than what I did, but the upside is that there really was a ton to love about this book.
I don't know, it was great. But I keep thinking about something I see a lot when I read reviews for Isla and the Happily Ever After. A lot of people say that their favorite part of the entire book is when the couples from the previous two novels have a cameo scene right at the end. And if that's truly their favorite part of all 300-something pages, then they couldn't have really loved Isla and her story that much. Although I don't share that opinion with Isla, that is how I feel with Leah. I was obsessed with every scene and sentence that mentioned Simon or Blue, but I didn't care much for Leah herself. What I wanted was a Simon sequel, butwhat I got was a Simon companion. It was still good, but not an all-time favorite, no matter how much I still love Simon and loved seeing him again in this. 4 stars.
I'm essentially the most indecisive person currently alive on Earth, so this is really no shocker, but I'm struggling to decide on a rating for Leah. Becky Albertalli is a fantastic writer of diverse and realistic teens. They take AP classes, they're involved in extracurriculars, they're multidimensional, they worry about and talk about and visit colleges (which is a huge piece of high school life that is so often missing in YA). Her characters are extremely relatable with their social media and their humor and their precarious balance of cynicism mixed with melancholy in regards to high school and what it means to be leaving it. I struggle to relegate this book to my "4 star books" because there is so much about this novel that is done exceptionally better than that of lots of my other 4 star books. And yet.
I think the problem is that this was not the story I wanted to read. Simon and Blue (so I don't unwittingly spoil anyone who hasn't read Simon) are genuinely some of my favorite characters in all of literature. I adore them. If Albertalli had written 300 plot-less pages of them being a mushy couple over senior year, I would've smiled the whole way through and given it an easy 5 stars because that's the kind of reader I am with them. But that's not what happened. Instead we got Leah, who, although sweet at times, was really more complain-y and obnoxious to me. She continually made decisions that I struggled to support, especially because most of the conflict seemed a little forced and self-created, and even the romance felt a tad unrealistic. Like Simon and Blue had conversations. Leah sort of just said Abby was made of light every three pages (hyperbolic, but not by much in my opinion). Also, it was kind of too long for me? Honestly, I often think this with books I slam through in a day (because a lack of breaks and extended exposure to characters can make a story become very old very fast), but there were a handful of times Leah's narrative felt pretty repetitive. Her almost-exclusively negative attitude was tiring, and unnecessarily so for that matter.
The representation was great, as expected with Becky Albertalli. I liked how Leah's being bi wasn't some major source of conflict, she just was. The family dynamic Leah had was also interesting and as a whole she was definitely a much different perspective from Simon's to read from. As usual, I tend to dwell on what I didn't like more than what I did, but the upside is that there really was a ton to love about this book.
I don't know, it was great. But I keep thinking about something I see a lot when I read reviews for Isla and the Happily Ever After. A lot of people say that their favorite part of the entire book is when the couples from the previous two novels have a cameo scene right at the end. And if that's truly their favorite part of all 300-something pages, then they couldn't have really loved Isla and her story that much. Although I don't share that opinion with Isla, that is how I feel with Leah. I was obsessed with every scene and sentence that mentioned Simon or Blue, but I didn't care much for Leah herself. What I wanted was a Simon sequel, butwhat I got was a Simon companion. It was still good, but not an all-time favorite, no matter how much I still love Simon and loved seeing him again in this. 4 stars.
peggykl's review against another edition
3.0
Just meh. It read like fan fiction to me. And way too singularly focused on the romance. (Every other sentence was about her heart beating out of her chest, her brain misfiring, etc.) I loved loved Simon Vs but this just didn't live up to the same level.