willwork4airfare's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

I received an ARC of this book in exchange for an honest review.

I was very excited to be able to read this book as soon as I saw it, but it didn’t quite live up to my expectations. Love and Profanity is a collection of essays from various writers from different backgrounds about their teenage years. Think, Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul, but with a cover and title like this, maybe one teens wouldn’t be a little shy about reading in public. My biggest issue with the book is probably just a function of reading an uncorrected proof.

The cover had me under the impression that this would be a contemporary collection, but you actually have an unpredictable range from high school seniors in the twenty-first century to “eleven almost twelve” year olds in 1976. Although it was probably intended to make the point that the experiences and feelings of being a teen are universal and timeless, some of the stories don’t set the stage very well and the uncorrected proof did not include many of the author bios. A longer piece might’ve been able to get away with a little ambiguity, but getting halfway through an eight page piece before finding out the context was unsettling and led to a lot of confused re-reads. While the book is geared towards teens and even suggested for as late as 14+, there were quite a few stories about younger kids which seems alienating towards high schoolers trying to find some connection with their peers.

As for the stories themselves, the quality was generally good and with such a variety, there should be something for everyone. There were a few awesome reads, a few that were well-written but anti-climactic or a little pointless, and even one that I think should be taken out entirely. I would be interested in seeing which pieces were written by established authors and which were current teens on the rise, which should be included in the final edition. The editing was not very tight with either the concept or content—for instance, I didn’t see how a lot of the stories fit their headings (the book was divided into three sections “Love and Profanity,” “Love and Physics,” “Love and Madness”and "Love and Apologies") or how the distinction really contributed to anything.

I haven’t found that this is a genre that many young adults are interested in, but if personal essays are your style, this collection may be worth a read.

I would give it a 3.5 if possible but the potential for improvement before the March 2 publication date will kick it over for now.

abbyreads8's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

I received an ARC of this book from the publishers and was very excited to get into it. At first, I was moderately interested. The short stories about the authors' teenage years were entertaining. However, it got very dull, very quickly. I grew bored with the stories- most of them (to be honest) just weren't that interesting.

That being said, while this wasn't the book for me, I can totally see other people liking it. Think "Chicken Soup for the Soul."

thepaperreels's review against another edition

Go to review page

2.0

description

The problem is.. I can't relate to most of the stories. Some doesn't even make sense to me. I don't know if I'm stupid and I just couldn't get the 'symbol' that the story teller is trying to say but, I really don't get it.

The title and the cover really caught my attention. There's something so beautiful about reading other people's memories and their perspectives on love and on being a teenager.

ekkihugsa's review against another edition

Go to review page

1.0

Chronique sur Sous ma Couverture

It bored me :(

randyribay's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

Like most short story anthologies, some really good ones, some meh, and some huh.
More...