Ratings22
Average rating3.8
Reviews with the most likes.
Fluffy and fun, but not particularly well written, often with repetitive and didactic dialogue (though with a good message - self-positivity, but I don't need EVERY inner monologue/dialogue to be a speech). Characters were diverse in so many great ways (bisexual, on the autism spectrum, etc.) and it was the first book I've read that took place entirely at a con. Wilde got a book out of a winning fanfic entry on Wattpad, so it reads like good fanfic, but there's certainly a place and a teen audience for this.
It is 3 am and I just finished this book. I. Freaking. Loved. It. It was so good, dealing with so much things at once that a lot of people experience every single day. I don't have any kind of anxiety, but I feel like i know more about it now. Like I have experienced it myself while reading this book.
Also, this books is about a Con and I never have been to one, I want to go so badly now.
I really loved the characters, obviously not everyone (FY, Reese) and the development they went trough. I shipped them so so so hard and omg I just loved it.
Also, this book f*cks up my schedule that I had for bookstagram because I need to include it. Probably as best book of 2017. Just saying. Go read it!
Dear swap buddy, I hope you don't mind that I secretly read your book, even though I bought it myself. I kept it clean and tidy because that's how I like my books too. Enjoy it! (I know she isn't going to read it ;))
I just finished reading the book last night and now that I slept on it I will attempt to write a short review about it.
The book is... well, it‘s fine. It does many things right and I appreciate it because of that but at the end of the day I wasn‘t really impressed either.
What I liked:
- the diversity; this book has a very diverse cast and none of it feels forced or like the author is trying to get “cookie points” for including poc or queer characters. I like that kind of “casual diversity” where it is still important but also comes across as natural
- the way that sexuality and mental health are being handled; I saw myself in the two main characters and some of their issues were very relatable for me personally
- the ode to pop culture and fandoms that this book is, essentially; even though it wasn't necessarily similar to my own fandom experiences, I still think that many fans will be able to identify with this aspect of the book
- the feminist tones; without spoiling anything, there is a lot of that in the book, the girls can handle their sht and they help each other out, sexist bullsht that other characters say gets called out immediately, etc.
Now, let‘s quickly get through the things that bothered me:
All in all, this book didn‘t manage to grab my attention for very long, I read the first 15 chapters and then reached the point of “Okay, can something happen or can I just be done with the book already.”
Don‘t get me wrong, there is plot, I think. It is first and foremost about romance, I guess. The problem is that both relationships weren‘t as interesting to me. One was already very established and had lots of pining, which gets tiring after a while and the other felt very rushed to me, so basically the exact opposite. Aside from that we have... I don‘t know, Coming of Age subplot maybe? And of course the whole convention stuff that‘s going on, which is very repetitive and still only described very vaguely sometimes? Characters say they want to do something and in the next scene it had already happened. The very constricted setting of only one weekend at SupaCon seems a bit unfortunate, looking back on it.
Also, the book kind of reads like a fanfiction, which isn‘t bad in itself of course, but I have read stories with a similar plot, that were properly paced and felt more dynamic and interesting, so I couldn‘t help but compare the book with those, subconsciously.
To sum it up, I would still recommend the book, because it is an easy, comfortable read and I think many of the topics that are mentioned in the book can be important for a variety of people. If I had read this book when I was maybe 14 I probably would have been all over it, just because it would have maybe helped me realize some things and helped me deal with them, which is already very important and its the reason why this book ended up with 3 stars from me.
THIS BOOK WAS GREAT. It was a fun, quick read, but it involved three BFFs, one of which is autistic with social anxiety, and her friends know this and are incredibly supportive. The second girl is openly bisexual. The third friend, the boy, is Hispanic. The three of them take an epic trip to a big Comicon in LA; the bisexual girl (Charlie) co-starred in a zombie movie, and is a popular Youtuber, so when she's invited to the Con she drags her two BFFs with her. Once there, she meets an idol of hers, another Youtuber, and discovers that her idol has a crush on her! So while dealing with her douchebag ex (her co-star from the movie), the other Youtuber asks Charlie out, and the two girls start a romance.
Meanwhile, the autistic girl (Taylor) and the Hispanic boy (Jamie) have loved each other for ages but been too afraid to admit how they feel. Largely left on their own, because Charlie's manager couldn't get them VIP passes, they explore the Con, geeking out over things and meeting another autistic woman, a comic book artist who gives Taylor some amazing advice about being afraid but doing things anyway.
I really really loved this book. I loved seeing autistic characters treated by their peers as just regular people with quirks, like everyone has. Taylor's friends support her when her brain freaks out, and make allowances for her needs, but don't treat her like she's disabled or fragile. I loved seeing how tight the bonds of friendship were between the three teens, and how excited for each other they were, even when good things happening meant less time to spend with each other.
This was just a really lovely, feel-good book with lots of minority representation, by an autistic author who knows what she's talking about. This is one more book off my Autism Reading List, and my pick for a book about friendship from the Litsy Booked 2018 Challenge.
You can find all my reviews at Goddess in the Stacks.