Two Summers
To read completely spoiler filed review with no blocking of spoilers and with snazzy Blackadder gif click here.This book shouldve of been tagged with a warning label that it would piss me off. Ill just get the good stuff out the way, the book is readable. In this day and age of YA, thats actually a plus because there is a lot of shit with purple prose out there that you just want to tell to f off. But even though this book didnt have purple prose I still wanted to tell it to sod off and slam the
15 year old Summer is planning to leave Hudsonville, NY, to spend the summer in France with the artist father she hasn't seen since her parents divorced many years ago--a trip she's undertaking against her mother's will. However, just as she's about to board the plane, her phone rings with an unknown number. Should she answer? In one storyline, she ignores the call and arrives in France to find no one waiting to meet her. Her father has gone to Berlin, leaving her to get herself to his house in
Check out this and other reviews on my young adult book blog, Here's to Happy Endings!Two Summers is such a fun book! I've read a lot of awesome, original contemporaries that are perfect for summer, but this book really takes the cake - it definitely is on my list of favorite summertime reads.Two Summer has such an interesting concept - a teenage girl, who while at the airport, has to make a split second decision of whether or not to board the plane to go visit her father in France or stay at
So this didn't really work for me. It had a fantastic premise and I love books that split off into two diverging plots (Pivot Point by Kasie West is amazing) but here there was literally no point to the two plots because they all seemed to end up in the same place, with the same results? I was just bored. I didn't want to pick the book back up and Summer was a very immature 15-year-old.
i thought it would be like a premonition and summer would get to choose from two options. but its more like two 'what ifs'. two separate stories. i did read them separately cause i did want to know how each one got unfolded and didn't preferred the mix up. its suppose to be like two parallel universe. lots of teen drama. but i did like the fact that at end of each story summer came out as stronger person and more opening to change.
Summer is on her way for a summer with her dad in France, and leave her small town in New York for awhile. As she was about to board the plane, she receives a call that everything suddenly depended on that split-second decision whether she answers the call or not. Her life split into two worlds wherein one, she stayed in New York, and in the other, she flies to France as planned. As Summer journeys towards her life in both situations, she is faced to some of the realities and challenges in her
Aimee Friedman
Hardcover | Pages: 368 pages Rating: 3.87 | 2323 Users | 416 Reviews
Identify Out Of Books Two Summers
Title | : | Two Summers |
Author | : | Aimee Friedman |
Book Format | : | Hardcover |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 368 pages |
Published | : | April 26th 2016 by Point |
Categories | : | Young Adult. Contemporary. Romance. Fiction. Travel |
Description In Favor Of Books Two Summers
ONE SUMMER in the French countryside, among sun-kissed fields of lavender . . . ANOTHER SUMMER in upstate New York, along familiar roads that lead to surprises . . . When Summer Everett makes a split-second decision, her summer divides into two parallel worlds. In one, she travels to France, where she’s dreamed of going: a land of chocolate croissants, handsome boys, and art museums. In the other, she remains home, in her ordinary suburb, where she expects her ordinary life to continue — but nothing is as it seems. In both summers, she will fall in love and discover new sides of herself. What may break her, though, is a terrible family secret, one she can't hide from anywhere. In the end, it may just be the truth she needs the most. From New York Times bestselling author Aimee Friedman comes an irresistible, inventive novel that takes readers around the world and back again, and asks us what matters more: the journey or the destination.Point Books Toward Two Summers
Original Title: | Two Summers |
ISBN: | 0545518075 (ISBN13: 9780545518079) |
Edition Language: | English |
Setting: | New York State(United States) France |
Rating Out Of Books Two Summers
Ratings: 3.87 From 2323 Users | 416 ReviewsArticle Out Of Books Two Summers
4.5 starsreview coming soonTo read completely spoiler filed review with no blocking of spoilers and with snazzy Blackadder gif click here.This book shouldve of been tagged with a warning label that it would piss me off. Ill just get the good stuff out the way, the book is readable. In this day and age of YA, thats actually a plus because there is a lot of shit with purple prose out there that you just want to tell to f off. But even though this book didnt have purple prose I still wanted to tell it to sod off and slam the
15 year old Summer is planning to leave Hudsonville, NY, to spend the summer in France with the artist father she hasn't seen since her parents divorced many years ago--a trip she's undertaking against her mother's will. However, just as she's about to board the plane, her phone rings with an unknown number. Should she answer? In one storyline, she ignores the call and arrives in France to find no one waiting to meet her. Her father has gone to Berlin, leaving her to get herself to his house in
Check out this and other reviews on my young adult book blog, Here's to Happy Endings!Two Summers is such a fun book! I've read a lot of awesome, original contemporaries that are perfect for summer, but this book really takes the cake - it definitely is on my list of favorite summertime reads.Two Summer has such an interesting concept - a teenage girl, who while at the airport, has to make a split second decision of whether or not to board the plane to go visit her father in France or stay at
So this didn't really work for me. It had a fantastic premise and I love books that split off into two diverging plots (Pivot Point by Kasie West is amazing) but here there was literally no point to the two plots because they all seemed to end up in the same place, with the same results? I was just bored. I didn't want to pick the book back up and Summer was a very immature 15-year-old.
i thought it would be like a premonition and summer would get to choose from two options. but its more like two 'what ifs'. two separate stories. i did read them separately cause i did want to know how each one got unfolded and didn't preferred the mix up. its suppose to be like two parallel universe. lots of teen drama. but i did like the fact that at end of each story summer came out as stronger person and more opening to change.
Summer is on her way for a summer with her dad in France, and leave her small town in New York for awhile. As she was about to board the plane, she receives a call that everything suddenly depended on that split-second decision whether she answers the call or not. Her life split into two worlds wherein one, she stayed in New York, and in the other, she flies to France as planned. As Summer journeys towards her life in both situations, she is faced to some of the realities and challenges in her
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