Take a photo of a barcode or cover
jamballdonut 's review for:
Today Tonight Tomorrow
by Rachel Lynn Solomon
This was such a perfectly done enemies-to-friends-to-lovers that I almost cried a few times. I always think I'm too old for YA/teen books and then I read one like this and it completely proves me wrong.
This is such a great story of growth - learning of your flaws or failings (ignoring your friends, focusing on a rivalry, focusing only on "being the best", etc) and actually doing something to apologise and learn from them, having hard conversations with your friends (Admitting you're upset by a choice they've made, realising you contributed to issues, etc), and having mature conversations about feelings (& I won't lie that I did physicall recoil when a certain someone made a certain comment about someone's father to them... Not to spoil anything, but wow, harsh).
Even as someone in my 30s, I feel like I've taken important things away from this book. Hard conversations are hard (Obviously), but they're essential and sometimes it's nice to be reminded why we have those hard conversations with the people we love.
This is such a great story of growth - learning of your flaws or failings (ignoring your friends, focusing on a rivalry, focusing only on "being the best", etc) and actually doing something to apologise and learn from them, having hard conversations with your friends (Admitting you're upset by a choice they've made, realising you contributed to issues, etc), and having mature conversations about feelings (& I won't lie that I did physicall recoil when a certain someone made a certain comment about someone's father to them... Not to spoil anything, but wow, harsh).
Even as someone in my 30s, I feel like I've taken important things away from this book. Hard conversations are hard (Obviously), but they're essential and sometimes it's nice to be reminded why we have those hard conversations with the people we love.