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A review by jess_theinkspell
Rebel love by Erin Watt
3.0
The young adults for me are a breath of fresh air, they are that thing that sometimes takes to rebuild the oxygen.
If we think of Erin Watt, the first book that comes to mind is inevitably "Paper Princess" and I can assure you that "Rebel Love" could not be more different.
First of all, the young adult of this book is not only for the age of the characters but also for the contents.
Beth is the classic protagonist who, personally, I hate. She is the typical character who rebels against her parents only because she feels suffocated. Are they unjust? You go to bed with the first one that happens.
In short, spoiled beyond belief, when she does everything to lose the trust of her parents she is astonished even if they punish her. Of course, it's a pretty realistic picture of how things work today.
Of course, her parents are not really very welcome eh, we talk about phone records of messages that seem like they were some kind of CIA agents...
Chase, however, I loved him. I can not tell you who he is, what he does, why he does it and blah blah. Know that he makes you love him like a puppy. His character is particular, he does not need to have an evolution because the only fact that he is in the book is his growth.
You will understand by reading.
Even the secondary characters and the villains are very well characterized, indeed far too I would say because you will hate them without difficulty.
The plot, in general, convinced me; for a young adult is perfect, although I admit that for the whole book it seemed to me that I was preparing myself for something huge until I then turned the page and found myself in front of the epilogue.
Good, but the best.
Among other things, from the very first pages - I have witnesses - I had a sense of deja-vu that half was enough. I swear to you that I knew what would happen, how it would have been written, what the characters would have said. It was as if I had already read it, but not in the sense that it seemed to be copied from another, but just as if I had already laid eyes on those pages.
The style, however, as it was already for Paper Princess, is wonderful. I drank the book in one night without feeling the slightest weight.
Surely I'll read more from this duo.
If we think of Erin Watt, the first book that comes to mind is inevitably "Paper Princess" and I can assure you that "Rebel Love" could not be more different.
First of all, the young adult of this book is not only for the age of the characters but also for the contents.
Beth is the classic protagonist who, personally, I hate. She is the typical character who rebels against her parents only because she feels suffocated. Are they unjust? You go to bed with the first one that happens.
In short, spoiled beyond belief, when she does everything to lose the trust of her parents she is astonished even if they punish her. Of course, it's a pretty realistic picture of how things work today.
Of course, her parents are not really very welcome eh, we talk about phone records of messages that seem like they were some kind of CIA agents...
Chase, however, I loved him. I can not tell you who he is, what he does, why he does it and blah blah. Know that he makes you love him like a puppy. His character is particular, he does not need to have an evolution because the only fact that he is in the book is his growth.
You will understand by reading.
Even the secondary characters and the villains are very well characterized, indeed far too I would say because you will hate them without difficulty.
The plot, in general, convinced me; for a young adult is perfect, although I admit that for the whole book it seemed to me that I was preparing myself for something huge until I then turned the page and found myself in front of the epilogue.
Good, but the best.
Among other things, from the very first pages - I have witnesses - I had a sense of deja-vu that half was enough. I swear to you that I knew what would happen, how it would have been written, what the characters would have said. It was as if I had already read it, but not in the sense that it seemed to be copied from another, but just as if I had already laid eyes on those pages.
The style, however, as it was already for Paper Princess, is wonderful. I drank the book in one night without feeling the slightest weight.
Surely I'll read more from this duo.