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A review by thereallilycooper
The Possibility of Somewhere by Julia Day
4.0
I love contemporary reads so much. There is just something about them that get's my blood pumping at the thought of reading them. It was no different with this book.
Eden is a girl driven to escape the life her dad has planned for her and what she is expected to be. She will do anything to achieve her goal, but she just wasn't expecting the dreadful four letter word: Love.
Individually these characters are insecure, lonely, and unsure of themselves. But together? They compliment the best in each other. It was amazing to see their animosity towards one another blossom into this infatuation in which they can't live without another. That's the best kind of love stories in my opinion.
This book reflects what society tends to jump to when it comes to relationships, looks, or anything that is deemed, "different." Which is why I honestly loved the diversity and unique structure in which this story was shaped upon. I have never read anything quite like it and get by the last page I was deep in love with it.
For a debut novel, the pages held deep thoughts and insights to love, school, and life with different incomes. Great book to read for seniors before they go off to college, or freshman college students starting their new life.
4/5 Stars
Book Playlist:
Drive by: Oh Wonder
You Always Make Me Smile by: Kyle Andrews
Bruises by: Train
2 Broke Kids by: Ruth B
Back To You by: Twin Forks
(Many thanks to St. Martin's Press for the book in exchange for an honest review)
Eden is a girl driven to escape the life her dad has planned for her and what she is expected to be. She will do anything to achieve her goal, but she just wasn't expecting the dreadful four letter word: Love.
Individually these characters are insecure, lonely, and unsure of themselves. But together? They compliment the best in each other. It was amazing to see their animosity towards one another blossom into this infatuation in which they can't live without another. That's the best kind of love stories in my opinion.
This book reflects what society tends to jump to when it comes to relationships, looks, or anything that is deemed, "different." Which is why I honestly loved the diversity and unique structure in which this story was shaped upon. I have never read anything quite like it and get by the last page I was deep in love with it.
For a debut novel, the pages held deep thoughts and insights to love, school, and life with different incomes. Great book to read for seniors before they go off to college, or freshman college students starting their new life.
4/5 Stars
Book Playlist:
Drive by: Oh Wonder
You Always Make Me Smile by: Kyle Andrews
Bruises by: Train
2 Broke Kids by: Ruth B
Back To You by: Twin Forks
(Many thanks to St. Martin's Press for the book in exchange for an honest review)