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tiemeinbows 's review for:
Love, Rosie
by Cecelia Ahern
"I don't want to be one of those easily forgotten people, so important at the time, so special, so influential, so treasured, yet years later just a vague face and a distant memory."
I honestly didn't like Rosie Dunn all that much. She annoyed me with her immature and adolescent ways most of the time. The book is full of jewels of passages like the above, though, and I admit that even though I didn't like the main characters much, I loved the book as a whole, and was really rooting for them at the end. Cecelia Ahern has that weird power over me where she makes me stay invested up through the end, no matter how annoying her characters are.
Of course there was also the added appeal in that I love epistolary novels. Or any novel that's told in a non-traditional way, really, but epistolary novels present such a nice challenge in their basic rules that I love to see how authors deal with that—and how they measure up. I'd love to write one myself someday.
I honestly didn't like Rosie Dunn all that much. She annoyed me with her immature and adolescent ways most of the time. The book is full of jewels of passages like the above, though, and I admit that even though I didn't like the main characters much, I loved the book as a whole, and was really rooting for them at the end. Cecelia Ahern has that weird power over me where she makes me stay invested up through the end, no matter how annoying her characters are.
Of course there was also the added appeal in that I love epistolary novels. Or any novel that's told in a non-traditional way, really, but epistolary novels present such a nice challenge in their basic rules that I love to see how authors deal with that—and how they measure up. I'd love to write one myself someday.