A review by leclerc
Solitaire by Alice Oseman

3.0

3.5 stars

"All I know is that I'm here. And I'm alive. And I'm not alone."

I really liked Tori as a character. I connected with her and I also related to her. Reading about her was like looking into the mirror which was both a weird but a beautiful experience.

A lot of the characters annoyed me so much, and it made me wonder how Tori didn't snap much sooner because I wouldn't have had the nerve to talk to these people more than 5 minutes each day and that's already an extradition.

I loved the way how Michael and Tori's relationship was established through the book, even though they frustrated me a lot and I really wanted to throw my book against the wall at some point, I still loved them and wished that we would have seen more of them, but again "This is not a love story."

Overall this book was good, not perfect but good. Solitaire is a book you either like or don't, I think it depends on if you relate to it or not because from my observation most people that liked it also deeply related to Tori. This book was indeed for kids who have no idea who they are but are figuring it out together, kids who are sad and empty and lost and trying to remember where they used to fit
in the world. Once again Alice but out a beautiful novel and to think that she wrote this when they were 17, impressive and motivating.

Nevertheless, Alice never fails to capture my feelings in a way no one else could. All their books feel like a warm hug.

"But books–they’re different. When you watch a film, you’re sort of an outsider looking in. With a book–you’re right there. You are inside. You are the main character."