Hello Beautiful is my first book by Ann Napolitano, but definitely not my last. It is a book that makes you think about life, about love, about death. It makes you see the world a bit differently—perhaps more vividly. It also completely shatters your heart.
Hello Beautiful is a well-written and realistic life story. I might be biased with my rating as this book was recommended to me by a dear friend, who loved it at least as much as I did.
When I started reading, I always felt a sense of impending doom. That feeling stayed with me until the very end, and while at first it scared me, in the end it made so much sense. I think it is supposed to be a part of the reading experience.
Let me warn you: this book is a roller-coaster. I felt so many powerful emotions, from joy to fear, sadness, and ultimately, pain. It's been a while since I read a book this incredibly written, and I have to say that it is probably my absolute favourite read of 2024.
I loved the characters, their depth and their individual stories. The way Hello Beautiful is written makes you feel like they are real people, and you´re simply just observing their lives from afar. I have to say there are three things I was not fully satisfied with, though.
1. not seeing all of the sisters together again for the last time 2. Alice never properly meeting Sylvie 3. the book ending before William and Alice properly spoke.
I am not saying that I did not like how the book ended, no. I really liked it. It´s just that I hoped it would be more positive.
“I don't know what's wrong with me, says Marianne. I don't know why I can't be like normal people.”
Normal People is a book I have heard a lot about from friends and from strangers. While at first it did not seem quite entertaining, the book quickly sucked me in. Unfortunately, the title is quite misleading. This book was not about normal people; it was about two very toxic and mentally ill individuals and a bunch of uninteresting people around them.
I could not find a single character I would like. On top of that, Marianne is a manic pixie/tumblrina and a victim who needs a good therapist, and Connel is so bland and manipulative and deserves to be kicked in the balls. Repeatedly. The other characters were so underdeveloped and one-dimensional that I can hardly remember them. And I have so many unanswered questions, like, Why is Marianne´s brother such a cunt? What the hell is wrong with her mother? Why does nobody step in and help Marianne or Connel during the entire book?
While I absolutely adore Sally Rooney as a person, Normal People is making me reconsider ever picking up another book by her. The whole story felt like going in circles to me. The same things kept happening over and over again, and I still don’t understand what was supposed to be the point or goal of it all. It was just two toxic people being pulled together at random times.
It took me more than a month to think of what to write in this review. I kept trying to find positives, but all I could think of was the style it was written in and the pacing. And, well, Sally Rooney herself.