This has been on my to-read list for a long time, and I finally got around to reading it. It sounded cute. Not sure why there's a coffee cup on the cover, it doesn't really represent the book. Something band-related would make more sense, but anyway. It definitely wasn't anywhere near as good as the synopsis led me to believe, and it didn't live up to the potential.
I found the beginning to be confusing, I had to go back and read who left the band, who was who, and what was actually happening. Three names were thrown out from the get-go, and I had to play catch-up.
Unfortunately, tomboy books tend to be very stereotypical, with Charlotte eating like a guy, not picking at their food like typical girls. I'm a tomboy and I don't have a big appetite. I'm self-conscious of eating in front of others. You can still be a tomboy and not eat like a man or enjoy eating in front of people. Give me a break.
Also there's always scenes where the tomboy has to get the makeover, start dressing differently, wearing makeup and dresses and heels. I guess it's expected in a tomboy book.
I felt like we weren't given enough background information on anything. How she became friends with Oliver in 5th grade, when him, Abe and her started the band. How they were all musically inclined. At first I thought she couldn't sing at all, but it turns out no, she can, she doesn't never did. Was she shy? Then there was some mention of her not singing because of her sister. Did she used to sing with her sister, and then stopped because Jilly moved to college? I really have no idea.
Charlotte made it sound like her dad, stepmom and stepsisters were mean but they all sounded ok.
Apparently they've been at least living together for two years but when did her parents split up, how long did they date before they got married?
Why did their mom leave, exactly? How did Jilly feel about a stepmom and stepsisters? They don't seem to like them, yet I don't really see a problem with any of them. The relationships are all very on the surface.
It wasn't even clear what state this was even in. It mentioned Decatur. Is that Decatur, Texas? The author bio says she lives in Atlanta where this book is set, yet this never mentioned Georgia. Unless there's an Atlanta, Texas??
I couldn't get a sense of what anyone looked like, either. Trip had blond hair and was tall, Oliver was good-looking. I don't even know what color hair and eyes he has? Benji had brown eyes...Now that I think on it, I don't remember Charlotte's hair color either. I think it's dark.
Everything was so vague and unclear.
I thought only one of her guy friends would like her, and that there would be one new boy who liked her. But there's Benji, someone she's gone to school with and so could have liked, and who could have liked her, but apparently neither did, so it's all sudden. The second he talks to her and asks to study, and Trip finds out and warns her from him, she pictures them making out under the bleachers with his hand down her pants. Bizarre. Talk about zero to sixty. Did she even like him like that?!
I thought Trip was the obvious choice. Then there's Oliver, who's the face of the band, who she also seemed to like. And who she had a crush on for a short time when she was younger.
Then the new boy Fabian, who she has a crush on. What are we going for, a love pentagon? It was really too much, and it made Charlotte seem fickle.
I didn't like that Benji, Trip, Oliver and Abe all smoked pot. Not my kind of people.
I was happy Charlotte had dated someone before, cause Trip dated someone for a short while after meeting Charlotte. But of course her relationship ended before Trip moved there. And Oliver has had past gfs, & was seeing someone.
No one liked Oliver's crazy gf Whitney, but Trip said she had a nice rack. Something I also didn't care for.
Of course the guy the heroine is interested in is gay, and the boy she started seeing was more of a friend, yet Trip can start seeing someone.
I found the dialogue to be a little inane. And the characters all talked similarly, like ending with, so. And, well. They can't all talk the same!
The MC's thoughts were a little weird at times: 'The idea of Fabian waiting - of drawing things out - makes me glow in strange places, including my armpits. And twenty minutes later? That glow goes even deeper, loops twice around my knees and back up over my head.'
'I am lined with double rainbows. Diamonds from the blue. Glittering sunshine through my bones.'
'I'm hot-buttery warm all over again.'
'"Yeah, well, you're apparently not going to start making out with anyone in the parking lot, so..."
I pause. Because it occurs to me that he actually could. Make an effort. With another girl. There are certainly plenty he could have his pick of. It's surprising that he's stayed without a new one for so long.'
It's been what, a week or two? How long could it have been since he finally dumped Whitney?
This appeared to take a fake-dating turn, which was very unexpected. She was using Benji, but then he kinda knew it and didn't mind at first. Then it appeared Oliver would have to fake-date someone too. Why do these books always turn out so messy?
Charlotte was stupid to just start talking to Lish again, who dumped her for the volleyball girls.
The girls are talking about Benji and all the things he's done to and with different girls. All these guys were bad, if you asked me.
I felt bad in the end for Benji because he really liked her, and offered to help her when he doesn't need help in that class, & how it felt like she was using him to get better grades and also to stifle the rumor of her and Oliver going out.
Like One of the Guys, a book I recently read about a tomboy character who was friends with boys was similar to this in that the friends have been together for years, yet when things start hitting the fan, everything gets messy, and it makes me wonder if they were all such great friends then why did everything mess up so suddenly and completely. Btw, with the exception of her and Trip, who talk on the phone, share music, and hang out, she didn't seem remotely close to Oliver and even less with Abe. And you guys are friends?? Where's the friendship?
The way she realizes, after weeks of her and Trip not talking, that she likes him, was just so random. Right out of left field.
She references this Golden Summer with Trip, but what was it? The summer she met him?? And how they don't have the history her and Oliver have, so they can't just bounce back.
Everyone seemed to have something to say, yet no one was saying their mind to anyone. I do not like a book's plot to be based on characters simply not talking when they should. Communication, folks. Say it with me.
Her stepmom was like a vague person, like a ghost really, flitting in here and there, barely formed. I couldn't get a sense of her personality, if Charlotte really liked her, what their dynamic was like, what Hannah's relationship with her dad was like. Her parents never talked to each other.
Also it was like Charlotte's using her stepsisters, she makes them sound horrible, but sure accepts their help with makeup & fashion.
The writing felt wordy towards the end, these big paragraphs of descriptions I wanted to skip. Not enough dialogue in places. Some pointless writing, like how Darby complemented a woman in her wedding dress, who didn't appear to appreciate it. And buying shoes, having makeup and hair done. Why are we reading about all that? How about less scenes of descriptions and pointless stuff and ones with her and Trip?? There's an idea!
I was so mad, when Trip writes in the notebook that Lily broke up with him because he couldn't stop talking about Charlotte. I had hoped it was just a ruse to make Charlotte jealous, not that he actually dated her. That really ticked me off. Cause she didn't even date date Benji, they went on like one, two dates, only kissed like once, and then she wanted to be friends. She had been using him anyway. Trip doesn't even wait to see if Charlotte is actually dating someone, no, he goes out and jumps into dating someone likethat.
After the nacho date he didn't wanna be just friends, and he was jealous of her and Benji, who she actually didn't even date in the beginning, she was crushing on Fabian! And the thing she thought was a date was just him hanging out with her, cause he's actually gay!
I wait practically the whole book to hear that he isn't actually dating Lily, but no he did.
Lily did kiss him on the ear, but at least there was no kissing on the mouth scenes, so I thought everything could be in the clear. There was hope.
It makes no freaking sense that Trip wouldn't tell Charlotte how he felt, that if he liked her, he'd then dump her completely, ignored her, found new friends and then a girlfriend. Why are YA books so screwed up?
'"Big dummy, I know. But once I knew how I felt, it sucked not being able to BE with you. And you kept getting extra-fabulous, extra-hard to not be with. But after...Lily... He says it like it's embarrassing. "Not being with you at all hurt even more."'
That LONG LONG book and the end was so unsatisfying. How the hell do authors write books this long and yet the endings are inconclusive?
Trip was absent for much of the book. I CAN'T STAND when authors have the guy the heroine ends up with barely make an appearance in the book. You have to build a relationship, and you can't do that by only having him in a few scenes and then ignore the heroine and date someone else.
Also, why was Oliver acting so weird about the rumor of him and Charlotte dating? It seemed like he really did like her, like he broke up with Whitney cause he couldn't resist Charlotte any longer, like the rumor going around said he did. That he kicked Trip out of the band so Charlotte could sing. But was he mad and ignoring her because he was repulsed that people thought he liked her? You have GOT to explain that weird behavior, cause that is not normal.
I kept wanting Trip back in the band. Why couldn't' they all be in the band? So he could be a part of Hansel and Gretel Crumbs, which him and Charlotte wrote. It's not fair the band sings his song without him.
We don't even know his reaction to the song, because the author cut the book off right as they're about to sing it. They don't even end up together, technically, because they're going to talk more after the song. But the book ended then. He confesses he has feelings for her, but she doesn't tell him she also loves him.
This was not a romance book. This was a band book that consisted of screwed up teenagers. A long rambling story to get to such a screwed up, unsatisfying, upsetting ending.
Charlotte was irritating because she never told Oliver off, she never told Lish off, or her mom, or Jilly, or Trip, or Sylvia and the other girl whose name I cant remember. Bronwyn? Bryanna? Something with a B. Whatever. My point is that the heroine could not stand up for herself and call people out on their crap. Get a backbone, open your mouth and say what's on your mind.
I can't say I liked any of the characters. Not my cuppa. Really, the band isn't my thing either.
So glad I only spent two days on this, you have no idea. The title sounded so cute, but boy, it was a big letdown.
Again, like One of the Guys, they don't even seem like friends! No one does. You have to build a close friendship, not just tell us. If these are friends, I don't want enemies.
The synopsis is misleading. She doesn't know her friend likes her until the end, when Trip finally confesses after weeks of being an idiot. And she didn't say the new guy made her feel like a girl, as the synopsis says. So...yeah.
There wasn't a satisfying conclusion to anything and nothing gets solved. Like her relationship with her mom, her ex-friendship with Lish, her sister being gone, her fight with her dad, which just gets swept under the rug, as did everything else. In the end, this really had no point, and there was no message. Besides not to put up with people like Lish. And to communicate more.
Perhaps most confusing of all - why did Oliver call her spider?! That wasn't ever clear to me.
Also, why is Trip called Trip? I think it was a nickname.
Her and Trip didn't even kiss! How can you spend time kissing someone you don't end up with, but the author can't even squeeze in ONE kiss with the guy she loves?!
I have two other books on my to-read list by this author, but I'm not eager to read more, if they're anything like this. Another disappointing tomboy book. Still waiting on a good one...