A review by beckyyreadss
One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston

emotional funny hopeful medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

I wanted to read this book as I wanted to read more books from authors I enjoyed over the years. I loved Red, White and Royal Blue and decided to read the next book Casey wrote which was this book. Let me tell you, this book was weird and hurt my head. 

This book is based on twenty-three-year-old August and she has just moved to New York and being in this city is supposed to prove to her that magic and cinematic love stories don’t exist. Especially with her working an old diner and being set on a task to find her uncle from the 70s – that's when he was last seen in the city. However, on her way to work she meets a gorgeous girl on the train named Jane. She is dazzling, charming, mysterious and impossible. Jane with her rough edges and swoopy hair and soft smile. August’s subway crush becomes the best part of her day, but pretty soon she discovers there’s one big problem: Jane is displaced in time from the 70s, and August is going to have to use everything she tried to leave in her past to help Jane. Maybe it’s time to start believing in some things after all. 

I will start with what i liked during this book. I liked the found family and the friendship, I love that they all practically adopted August from the second she arrived in New York. I love that the people she works with and lives with are looking out for her especially when she doesn’t want to look after herself. There were parts of this book where I related to August, especially with having no clue what to do with your life in your 20s and other times, I wanted to smack her for being so stupid. 

I would have loved for this to have been a cute lesbian New York story with finding your way in a big city, but instead the whole stuck on the subway which just make it weird and just unnecessary at times. I didn’t like the whole time-traveling/matrix aspect, I was more interested in the mystery of who she was and where August’s uncle was. Some parts of the book were slow, and it felt like a chore to get through the chapter, and it felt like that for most of the middle of the book, it was only towards the end that I was really interested. I felt like we could have skipped half of the crap in the middle and carried on the end especially with Jane knowing her whole family are alive and she hasn’t seen them since 1970.  

This book was a drag, and it took 95% of the book for me to be interested in it and to care about these characters. If you like matrix/time stuck sort of books, this is for you. But the groundhog affect wasn’t for me. 

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