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bhavyahaahha 's review for:
P.S. I Like You
by Kasie West
Lily Abbot is the kind of awkward person who doesn't have many friends, who stays lost in a world of lyrics and melodies, a world of color and music. Oh, and she hates Chemistry. All she does in the class is write lyrics, design dresses, and occasionally writes on the table. So one day when someone completes the lyric she had written on the table, she is pleasantly surprised. The person becomes her pen-pal, and they keep communicating through letters tucked under the desk. The letters become the highlight of every day. They become really good friends (or pen-pals) - sharing secrets, song recommendations back and forth. Lily feels like she really wants to know the identity of this letter-writer who has clouded all of her thoughts.
This book is a sweet high-school romance. It was interesting, kind of surprising, and I can kind of picture it as a movie, because so many things are happening to the character - her songwriting, her crazy family, her mortal enemy at school, the mystery note-writer...
The dialogue was great, and the book features some beautifully written lines, songs, and letters, which I feel like is reason enough to read it. I enjoyed the letters which were exchanged between Lily and the other person, and I absolutely loved the songs that Lily writes towards the end.
I liked the songwriting aspect of the book. I think that's what drew me to the character, that she is a songwriting who has never completed a song. I feel like in most books, the person with the artistic talent is so... genius with it, and even though Lily is a great lyricist, this was a little... comforting to know?
People who like classic romance novels and the enemies-to-lovers thing would find his interesting. Also is it okay to say that readers who like cliché can go for this one? (This book isn't cliché but...)
This book is a sweet high-school romance. It was interesting, kind of surprising, and I can kind of picture it as a movie, because so many things are happening to the character - her songwriting, her crazy family, her mortal enemy at school, the mystery note-writer...
The dialogue was great, and the book features some beautifully written lines, songs, and letters, which I feel like is reason enough to read it. I enjoyed the letters which were exchanged between Lily and the other person, and I absolutely loved the songs that Lily writes towards the end.
I liked the songwriting aspect of the book. I think that's what drew me to the character, that she is a songwriting who has never completed a song. I feel like in most books, the person with the artistic talent is so... genius with it, and even though Lily is a great lyricist, this was a little... comforting to know?
People who like classic romance novels and the enemies-to-lovers thing would find his interesting. Also is it okay to say that readers who like cliché can go for this one? (This book isn't cliché but...)