RJ is not thrilled about seeing his mom making out with her new boyfriend husband in front of him. He is even less thriller about going to a prep school for problematic rich boys. But he doesn’t care too much; he doesn’t plan on staying there long. If only his new stepbrother stopped making him socialize…
Sloane is always the responsible daughter, the strong one in charge of her sister, the role model student. Her ex-boyfriend was a bad idea that led to horrible consequences and she’s determined it won’t happen again. No boys, no sex, she needs to concentrate if she wants to obtain the scholarship she’s been working for. But that new guy with the sassy tongue who keeps trying to take her on a date is not letting her go that easy…
From the first scene, where RJ’s mother is making out with Fenn’s father in front of them in a very rushed wedding neither of them wanted to be part of, I knew I was in for a wild ride. RJ is a hacker obsessed with the most forbidden girl in the region: the headmaster’s daughter and king-of-the-school ex girlfriend. Not that RJ cares: he’s not known for following rules. But soon he’ll understand that some limits cannot be broken and Duke -the king-, is not someone to play tricks with.
The heroine, Sloane, is the typical cold queen who is always better than everyone else, shuts up all the bullies and seems all perfect on the outside. I’m torn between how many times I’ve read about this kind of ‘badass’ female character and how much I love them every single time. Let’s be honest, we know they are not real, but we want them to be real so badly that we don’t care.
She’s one of those people who are hard to get close to. You think you know them, that you’re in there, but then they rearrange the furniture, and you realize you were only ever talking to a reflection of a reflection in a hall of mirrors, still totally out of reach.
You also have The Friends:
🍓Lawson: bad boy by own merits, has only one trait of mind and always gets what he wants.
😇Silas: Lawson’s official babysitter, is supposed to be a good boy but he has some secrets on his own
📚Fenn: former bad boy, work in progress to be good enough for a certain young lady he’s falling for
I imagine you have figured out there is a lot more going on than romance. If Gossip Girl and Off Campus series had a child, Misfit would be the result: teenagers, romance, friendship and loads of drama. For the same price, you have five POVs instead of only two -which also means you’ll have ⅖ of the romance. While I enjoyed RJ-Sloane’s banter, it was far from EK masterpieces. Having so many POVs decreased the amount of development per character and the romance suffered from that-or maybe I’m not that much into the insta-attraction anymore. The friendship between the four boys was my favorite part of the story, especially the dynamics of Silas-Lawson.
Despite never being a Gossip Girl lover and expecting a completely different story, I enjoyed myself reading this book. I laughed a lot at the beginning and was left with too many answers I’m dying to get resolved. EK also managed the very rare thing of making the 5 POVs interesting, although Lawson’s would win any possible competition-I’m very excited to see the party boy reformed, preferible with you-know-who.
I did feel it was a bit too slow in the middle, the characters tend to walk in circles and RJ's unfairness with Sloane frustrated me to no end. But they are teenagers, I guess doing dump things and creating a whole drama out of a non-existing problem is their major. I’m also aware RJ’s being a hacker and being obsessed with Sloane is quite problematic, but I accepted it because:
1) EK needed him for an ongoing investigation
2) I’d never read a romance with a hacker as hero before; RJ’s character in general was very original because he hates talking and spends his days in front of a computer
3) hackers are kind of hot when they are not stalking you
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Prep series
1. Misfit: 3.5 stars