Reviews tagging 'Pregnancy'

The Playlist by Morgan Elizabeth

4 reviews

maddie_0930's review

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emotional funny lighthearted relaxing fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.25

this book was adorable and just phenomenal. The book would be a five star read if there weren’t two minor factors. One, Zoe was insufferable. Every page I was either talking about how much she angers me or how much I’m like her (which I guess says a little about me lol). I just wish she was a little more like able and chill. Also, in the epilogue, I didn’t like how without even dating for more than a week, they got married. And I didn’t like the constant time skips. But overall it was cute and I can’t wait to read the other books

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inkdrinkers's review against another edition

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emotional funny lighthearted fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

“Can I ask you a question?”

Zoe is convinced that the only way to live is to be successful - for her friends, for her parents, for everyone who knows her - all that matters is that they see that she has her shit together, when she very much doesn't. So when she suddenly discovers her childhood bucketlist and realizes she's let that little girl down in so many ways, she quits her fancy job, dumps her boring boyfriend, and spirals. When Zander, her best friend's brother, and someone who's always been there for her, steps in to whisk her away, Zoe wonders if maybe she can return to her old self with a little help.

I don't think a Morgan Elizabeth book exists that I don't shed ugly tears over. I really thought I was somehow safe with this one - even though Zoe's strict people pleasing tendencies cut me to the core, I couldn't see a reason why I'd be a bawling mess by the end. I was wrong, I cried like a baby the last 30% of this book and I don't even care. It was worth it. It was 100% worth it to feel so healed and seen by Zoe embracing her inner child, living life for herself, and have Zander be the best book boyfriend in the world who just wanted to see her happy.

So many of Morgan's books are love letters to Swifties, but this one is the ultimate one! I loved the nods to Taylor in every single chapter and moment, from the playlist itself, to the bucket list items, to even the references in text that weave in lyrics and references from her entire discography. I adored this book for so many reasons, but it had a little extra something with the reminder that, for so many fans, we grew up listening to Taylor age and sing about everything we hope to experience (and some things we don't).

I just loved this. I have to go blow my nose again and contemplate my existence.

Content warnings: Sexual content, Panic attacks/disorders, Domestic abuse/Toxic relationship (in past), Pregnancy (optional epilogue)

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rachael_perry's review

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sad fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
I’ve said a lot while reading this, but I’ll start by saying it’s so hard to enjoy a book you’re constantly correcting. There were so many grammatical and spelling errors that I was surprised to see in the Acknowledgments that there were, in fact, editors. Both main characters were boring and generic, the premise started out so good but was executed poorly, and the smut scenes were like reading transcribed porn (super male-gazey, even when the author wanted us to think the focus was on Zoe- it wasn’t). This book is basically a manual for how to love-bomb someone. It was so manipulative. All the characters were aged in their thirties but acted like twenty-year-olds. In fact, I have a strong suspicion that Elizabeth aged her characters after initially making them in their twenties and deciding she wanted them to be “more mature.” The girls have One Direction and Jonas Brothers posters on their walls in their childhood bedrooms. Those bands were big ten years ago, which would make her characters twenty-year-old women with posters of prepubescent boys on their walls. Which I guess is on theme with the subtle pedophilia throughout the book.

Edit: My IT husband looked up “coworking coffee shop” and discovered it IS a thing. They are booths one can rent out for work. They cost at least $100 to rent. It looks like a business center. Now that I know what it is, it seems unrealistic to have one in a small town in New Jersey, and doesn’t sound very lucrative.

Spoilers ahead:

I hated Zander. He was controlling, arrogant, and a dick. Every time he pulled the hair tie out of Zoe’s hair and threw it away, I put the book down. I have curly hair and can tell you that shit hurts. Even if you straighten it, unless you shellac it, curly hair frizzes, and yanking a hair tie out snags. It’s not cute. 

Zoe was so annoying. She has some serious self esteem issues. Every time she said, “Okay, Zander,” I wanted to strangle her. She never stood up for herself. Oh wait, one time she did… 75% of the way through the book, and she caved almost immediately after doing so. I got so tired of her inner monologue and her constant doubt.

Elizabeth gave them just enough backstory with one another that we knew they were friends, he had a nickname for her, and they crushed on each other but never acted upon it. But the annoying pet of that basic background is that even though Zander called Zoe “Pip,” and she liked when he did, he continued to call her “baby,” which she thought to herself a few times that she did not like.

I’m honestly too tired to go into everything I disliked about the book. It was repetitive. Zander was a mind-reader. There were constantly action tags from one character connected the dialogue of the other character. I still don’t know what a “coworking coffee shop” is, and I have worked at several coffee shops. It’s not a thing, and if it was, it would have a name that made more sense. Zoe and Zander never did anything without being told to do it. The necklace Zander gave Zoe was given the way a NXIVM brand was given. He was possessive as fuck and constantly wanted her to be someone she clearly wasn’t.

Writers need to read. I am currently also reading “People We Meet On Vacation,” by Emily Henry, and the two characters are falling in love organically without having to tell each other constantly that they’re trying to be together because, “we’re meant to be.” It’s lovely and allows the reader to connect with the characters so that when any love scene does eventually appear, it’s earned and valid, not disgusting.

I read a scene in a different book where a female character took a body shot off another woman, and it was more erotic than the smut scenes in this book.

Elizabeth missed a serious opportunity to have Zander use Taylor Swift lyrics in his proposal, and maybe, you know, show her he’s been paying attention? Despite my dislike of this book, “Love Story” lyrics were going through my head through that entire scene, my brain desperately trying to connect the premise with the content.

If I were not going to have the opportunity to hear from the author, I would have DNF’d this book by page 70. It was a slog to get through. I also read the deleted scene and am so glad it was deleted. It’s the worst Zander ever was to Zoe, and it’s cloaked in the author’s complete misunderstanding of what an dominant/submissive sexual relationship is supposed to be. </spoiler)

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stephmcoakley's review

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emotional hopeful lighthearted medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0


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