Ratings19
Average rating3.7
This was a one-sitting read for me. While the premise deals with the unfunny topic of parental kidnapping and the fallout, the characters are adorable and easy to root for.
oh my god. that's the only thought going through my head rn. when I started this book, something was telling me that I would love it, I didn't expect to actually love it though
Looking through reviews on here, it seems I might be the only person who didn't enjoy this book at all. And that is exactly why I never trust Goodreads ratings.
Emmy has known Oliver her entire life. But when Oliver's dad kidnaps him when they're seven, everyone's world is turned upside down. Now they're 17 (?) and Oliver is back. But no one is the same. Can they still be friends, etc, etc, etc. There's a heart on the cover and this is contemporary YA. I'm sure you can see where this is going.
I wanted to give this three stars so badly just because the plot line is finally something not overdone in YA. It sounded so promising and emotional. But I just couldn't give this more than two stars. I just really did not enjoy reading this book. I kind of dreaded it?? I had to force myself to finish because I JUST DNF'd a book. So here we are. The writing style is kind of painful and the romance was SO cheesy at times. I so wish it had been better because the PLOT. Childhood best friend gets kidnapped and then just shows up again 10 years later?! Come on! This had so much potential.
I really can't explain what I didn't like about this other than the writing style, the parents were absolutely clueless and AWFUL, and Oliver has just come back from being kidnapped and everyone is just pretending nothing happened??? This honestly would have been so much better if it was from his POV or dual POV. Or if it focused on that one aspect. But between Emmy's drama and the side character drama, it was way too much and nothing got focused on. Not to mention that every single “twist” and pain point was SO predictable I couldn't even believe it. It was just really frustrating to read.
TLDR; This is not it, sis.
Would I recommend?
No. Go read a Sarah Dessen or Deb Caletti if you're looking for contemporary YA that will actually make you feel something other than bored and frustrated.
This book was really not what I expected. It was a bargain ebook, which right away means I lower my expectations. Not that there's anything wrong with picking up a cheap or free ebook, but it's often a crap-shoot. While I've found some good books that way, I've also found a whole lot of not so great. The simple descriptive summary combined with the slightly cutesy cover art made this sound a sweet, fluffy YA romance of sorts. And while that's definitely a part of the story, it's really just a small part. This is more a grounded, contemporary coming of age that focuses on friendship. It's not of the overly dramatic, look how many social issues the author can shove into 250 pages variety.
It really was the bonds of the various relationships that made this story come together. And not just with Emmy and Oliver. The relationships with Drew and Caro and even with Emmy's parents were important too. They were real and realistic and yet awkward and honest (even when the words were lies). There was a good amount of sarcasm and humor but also an underlying understanding. The teens talked like teens, not pretentious 26 year olds. The adults were adults, not props or plot pieces or cheesy dispensers of proverbial advice.
There were two things I did kind of wish for throughout: 1) more descriptions of the characters physically. Things like hair color or nervous ticks or whatever and 2) sometimes I really wanted to know what Oliver was really thinking. I don't know that I necessarily needed his POV a lot, I just wish he'd spoken up a little more at times. Really, those are just minor notes when it comes to the story as a whole. I'd definitely recommend this anyone looking for a down-to-earth, heartfelt, contemporary YA story.
So now I many have to check out the author's other works.