Ratings2
Average rating4.5
Cleo and Layla used to be best friends. But in Sophomore year, everything changes. The two drift apart until their friendship dramatically ends. Cleo is still trying to make sense of what happens as she tries to move forward making new friends, listening to jazz and reading her beloved Shakespeare. Told in two timelines, before and after, Cleo’s story of grieving for a lost friendship.
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Overall this book had so many good components in it and I would recommend it to so many people. Here's why:
1. The representation is amazing! Not only do we have diversity in terms of race, but also LBGTQIA+ characters and disability rep also. What makes it even better is that for the most part, they aren't statements. They don't have to be included with an exclamation point. Life is this diverse and we shouldn't even blink in the face of it in literature.
2. Its relatable! So many books focus on romance and heartbreak and not enough about how much friendship is valued, and more importantly, how devastating losing that someone is. I personally related to it in many ways, not all because this is a story of its own, but enough to make this book great. I know that most people reading it would relate also.
3. The main character is not perfect. It was annoying at times but it reflects how we are human.
4. I love how family, romance and long-term grief are explored alongside the main crux of the story. It was so eloquently done and mirrors how complex life can be.
So why isn't it five stars?
1. She was annoying. She was imperfect which sometimes makes you wanna shake the book. The ex-best friend was flawed and that made me made too, even though that was the point.
2. It leaned into the cringy at times, specifically in the romance, to where I once felt it unbelievable.
4.5/5 stars!