For readers of Dolly Alderton and Candice Carty-Williams, a spiky bisexual love story that introduces the unforgettable Ada—a free-spirited Holly Golightly for the age of DMs who follows the whimsies of her heart wherever they lead.
Ada is a seeker, a perpetually moving ball of excess. A twenty-six-year-old Australian living in London, she ekes out a living as a cabaret performer and part-time temp. Yet Ada can't imagine wanting to be any other age or any other place. Every night is an opportunity to be thrilled and every morning a chance to recount her escapades to friends.
So when Ada falls for Sadie and Stuart at the same time, she sees no reason not to pursue them both. But as the responsibilities of adult life begin to encroach—bills, family, more bills—and Sadie and Stuart find out about one another, the people around Ada increasingly insist it’s time for her to settle down. Can she resist the inevitable?
Effortlessly hilarious and painfully relatable, Go Lightly is a love letter to girls who are the life of the party; girls who say yes without fear. In smartly observed and endlessly warm prose, Brydie Lee-Kennedy contemplates the great freedoms and greater uncertainties of modern love and friendship, introducing an utterly flawed yet charming character who revels in her youth and sexuality while reckoning with a serious case of main character syndrome.
adding books purely because they remind me of summer...
which is maybe not the best possible reason.
if i had a nickel for every time i'd read an advance copy of a highly anticipated queer romance set [partially] in edinburgh this year that ended up feeling unfinished and disappointing, i'd have two nickels. which isn't a lot but it's weird that it happened twice.
this had a writing style that grew a little cumbersome after a while, very jokey and self-aware and interested in describing feelings and defining words. the trick to being a critical reader is that most books have a crutch phrase they can't stop using, which you will immediately hate as soon as you identify it. this one's is all varieties of "in the [blank] sense of the word."
anyway. i like an unlikable protagonist as much as the next person, or actually probably more due to my own bad personality and innate desire for representation, but that has to include one of two things: - literary fiction vibes in which the main character is intentionally awful, and the point is more Themes and Writing and Symbols and all that intellectual stuff, or - character development.
this is very much supposed to be a fun, fluffy, contemporary-y book, and so you'd think our protagonist might get around to changing from the selfish girlfriend, friend, sister, lover, and daughter she begins the book as. and it seems like she considers it with about 40 pages to go, but then she backtracks.
a character-driven story like this, with a character who does not care about people at all, with a story arc that includes absolutely no change between the first page and the last...well, it just feels like a waste of time.
Go Lightly is everything I hoped each of Sally Rooney’s novels would be, a millennial novel that actually captures the realities of millennial life. It’s wry and self-deprecating and insightful without holding your head under its water – like if Rooney had a sense of humour and used quotation marks for speech.
It took me forever to get through this book, and I strongly suspect that I (an older reader) was not the target audience. If you are in your early twenties, I think this book will read very differently for you than it did for me. It had a kind of a more Sally Rooney (Conversations With Friends) vibe.
From the title, you may correctly surmise that this is a contemporary rendering of Truman Capote's famous character Holly Golightly.
Ah, to be twenty six again, full of yourself, patronizing to twenty one year olds, impervious to advice, dangerously suggestible, and a compendium of bad choices, limited sleep, and cheap drinks.
The opening setting is in Edinburgh, during the cold, dark, winter, at a party where you can smell the staleness of the atmosphere: a mix of old couches, cigarettes, and spilled beer.
Living in a University town is like living in a tourist destination. It mirrors the untethered nature of Ada, an Australian ex-pat, who loves this age, and refuses the serious in favor of the temporary. Speaking of which, the novel immediately moves toward London. The first location only serves as a vehicle to create a tenuous bond for the characters.
I never did quite get a hold on what made Ada tick. Ada fears being overlooked, so she tries to be completely present, to be noticed. This means she also becomes a little obnoxious. Ada privately wonders if she's more of an experience than a person.
Imagine thinking that your purpose is just to prop up the egos of others. Ada battles a gnawing emptiness. But, she also knows how to switch out masks of emotions to manipulate others, and at the same time, feels too much? You see my dilemma. I had a hard time getting all of her presented traits to work together, and no part of her seemed particularly likeable. I had sympathy only for Mel, a side character.
So, basically this is a novel about conflicting emotional travails in the context of the world of hookups and the gig economy. I'm not sure what the point of all of it is supposed to be, and quite a bit seemed unbelievable, especially the text exchanges.
As far as style goes, I prefer my scenes more spare in their description, with more emphasis on mood and atmosphere. That's a subjective preference, I just want the reader to know that the author describes a lot of extremely mundane actions.
There are a few very top notch lines, so we know that the author has potential.
So, I would sum up the world of the MC, Ada, as such: Ada observes a lot of the world insightfully, though she bulldozes her way through it, and feels way too much about it all. If I'm exhausted by her, she is even more exhausted by herself.
Thank you to Goodreads Giveaways and to Harper Perennial, an imprint of Harper Collins Publishers, for providing an ARC of this novel for review.
I thought I didn’t like this book that much in the middle but I think I just hated her relationship with Stuart. As I should. I would say before she goes to Florida this is a 3 star read and during/after it is a 5 star read. I found this incredibly cathartic and Ada felt so real — you really watch her grow throughout the book.
slipping into this girl’s brain for 300 pages was so easy and pleasant and i can see how maybe you wouldn’t like this if you’re not the target audience but i am. so i don’t care. what a lovely little journey
I wanted to throw this book across the room when reading some of the messages sent to the main character but in the end I deeply related to the delusion
I received this book as an ARC from Netgalley, however all opinions are my own.
How I read this book: eBook
So the reason I wanted to read this book is that it was described as LGBTQIA+ romance on Netgalley and I requested the book. I am so appreciative that I was able to get this book and read it before it officially comes out and I definitely will be buying this book in physical form when it does. Most of the book is really enjoyable and is just such an easy read. It was nice to see some queer representation which isn't just MLM or WLW specifically. As someone who's bi/ace I find it really difficult to find representation in books/movies and it just made me really happy to see it here. I did spend a couple days longer reading this book not because it was difficult to read but because it was so easy to just pick up when I had a couple of minutes spare! The chapters are mostly short so it's so easy to pick up where you left off! I also really enjoyed the chapters which were the characters sending messages to each other because it made the book feel more real. It was also great to see real life situations being handled very realistically as well and mostly not too overdramatized (although Ada does sometimes still have her moments). The only critique I have about the book is that there are two moments that involve drug use, and that put me off a little bit (not enough to stop me reading, but is worth noting if you're uncomfortable with reading that). I definitely would recommend this to anyone who just wants a nice little queer contemporary to read throughout the day!
My Favourite Characters:
- Mel: Mel is Ada's best friend and roommate and I absolutely adored her throughout the book. She very much tries to be Ada's moral compass but also lets her do her own thing with little judgment.
- Sadie: I loved Sadie from the very start. She very much matches Ada's energy and is so honest and communicative throughout the book.
- Hank: Hank is honestly such a sweetie and I wish we actually got more of him throughout the book but I enjoyed the time we did get with him.
My Least Favourite Characters:
- Stuart: I just didn't like him at all in the book. I understand that Ada can be a bit difficult sometimes throughout the book, but that did not excuse his behaviour. He was just so creepy and I really just hated him.
There are no words for this book for me. I struggled through reading it and if it hadn’t of been an ARC I don’t think I’d of finished it.
Obviously I can appreciate that some people may love this book but ultimately, it wasn’t for me. I didn’t enjoy the writing style… it was a lot of Ada did this then Ada did that and then Sadie said this so Ada said that. The only parts I did enjoy were the chapters with the messages.
I’m not even certain I understand what happened at the end. I’m not being dense I don’t think, I just couldn’t tell you what happened…
Also, I hate Stuart, he’s so annoying.
I can appreciate the journey that the book takes Ada on, where she’s trying to find herself and find who she is as a person by herself and with others. But other than that it just wasn’t for me.
Thoroughly enjoyed this, when I first started the book I was unsure but in time became hooked!
At points I really related to the main character Ada and truly felt what she was feeling.
It was really interesting to see how her relationship would develop with Stuart and Sadie (of course the boy was awful) and I really enjoyed the small glimpse into the relationship with her family.
Also appreciated the chapters that were the messages between Ada and others, having some short chapters in a book is just *Chefs kiss*
Definitely recommend this book if you are looking for something light hearted and easy to read.
Thank you to NetGalley for sending me this book in exchange for a review. All opinions are my own*
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
wanted to hate this bc the blurb was giving fan fic. can’t argue with good writing though. not much happens but also everything and that’s girlhood. good food descriptions and overground shoutout. also I’m writing reviews now
I'm not sure I understand the point of this book. The title never made sense for me either.
The main character, Ada, was unlikable from the start. Her thoughts and actions were bizarre and the why's of her life didn't add up.
The supporting characters weren't particularly likeable either. Mel, Sadie & Stuart all had a major impact on Ada but their place in Ada's life was confusing. Stuart was a mess from the start and any attraction between them made zero sense.
I'm sure there are people who love this kind of story and writing but this particular book just wasn't for me.
Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for my honest review.
Gifted this book as an ARC, was slow to start with but I really enjoyed. I flew through it and actually enjoyed the main characters pov. I saw someone say it’s for fans of Sally Rooney, but I’m not a fan of theirs and enjoyed this read sooo 🤷🏽♀️ it’s a modern story of a woman finding herself in London, it’s a cliche but I enjoyed. I only found the “she said and then I said and then she said” aspect 🤭
This was just delightful, a messy and funny book about modern love, friendship and how long the nights seem when you’re young! Ada is a bisexual 20-something that falls for both a man and a woman and can’t seem to decide haha. I think if you’re a Rooney, Dolly Alderton, Candice Carty-Williams fan - this will appeal. Loved all the scenes from Edinburgh to London to Sydney and even Florida. This surprised me in the most wonderful way. Beautiful last scene, great prose. Someone to watch.
I went into this book with such high hopes. I had seen it compared to Sally Rooney (though, admittedly, I haven't read any Sally Rooney) and that part of it was set in Edinburgh during the Fringe (a setting I know well) and I was really excited to read it. What I got, though, was really disappointing.
This follows Ada, a 26-year-old who is struggling to get acting work and living in a two bedroom flat in London. She is juggling a sort-of relationship with fellow actress and Australian Sadie and a text romance with Stuart who messaged her after seeing her Fringe show.
That's about as much as you know when you go into it, and also about as much as I knew at 28% where I DNF-ed. That wasn't my issue though. My issue was that I am 26 - the same age as the main character is meant to be - but everything she said and did was so textbook millennial. The way she talked and acted was as if she was an American at least ten years older than she was meant to be and I really could not get past it since so much of the story was making such a big deal of her being in her mid twenties. I tried so hard to look past this and soldier on, but I really was not enjoying it and decided to put it down.
Thanks to Bloomsbury and Netgalley for an e-ARC copy of this book! All opinions are my own and this did not affect my review!
wauw, wauw, wat een mooi boekie. het leven is continu in verandering en alles gaat op en neer. zeker richting het einde bouwt het boek echt naar een heel mooi slot toe: het begin van een nieuw hoofdstuk van Ada, wie ik overigens al het beste toewens (ookal is ze fictief). mijn boek heeft een andere (mooiere) cover, met noedels en een zwemplaatje dat lijkt op deze hier, en die vind ik erg nice. eerst waren de linkjes lastig te leggen, maar richting het einde worden de cover duidelijk! de noedels voor eenzaamheid, verdwaaldheid, en het water/zwemplaatje voor het moment van nieuwe intimiteit, relaties, kansen, hoofdstukken. dat is althans hoe ik het interpreteer had overigens wel graag nog even iets meer gehoord over Stuart, want wtf? maar misschien eindigt zijn verhaal juist hier, omdat nou eenmaal sommige situaties kut zijn en je andere mensen soms niet kan en nooit zal begrijpen in hun acties
This was an interesting and quick read about Ada, a free-spirited Australian bisexual and her adventures in modern love and what happens when she falls for two people at the same time and the challenges/chaos that results plus her complicated relationship with her sister.
Good on audio and recommended for fans of books like It's been a pleasure, Noni Blake. Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for an early digital copy and @libro.fm for a complimentary ALC in exchange for my honest review!
I‘m not mad that I read this book but I will say this is one of the most exhausting protagonists I’ve ever had to read about. Maybe I got very lucky in my 20s or I just didn’t have the „typical“ mid twenties experience (whatever that would be) but I couldn’t relate to Ada at all and I felt she was being a horrible friend/sister/situationship to all of the people around her and most (if not all) of her problems felt imagined or could have been solved by actually saying them out loud?? So yeah, i didn’t enjoy this book as much as I was hoping.
DNF: Page 166 I was unable to get into this book. The writing tripped me up many times and the characters were strange. I read some reviews to see if it improved. For the most part I think I am too old for this book. Perhaps it is meant for young millennials. Also “go lightly” is a colonoscopy prep drug and I cannot see this title without thinking of that which is the best while relaxing.
This book feels humid. Like ac broken, fan on, window cracked. I was really surprised by this and probably wouldn’t have liked it as much if it wasn’t for the Tampa/Florida. My issue is that the straight vs queer relationship can fall stereotypical in their dynamics. The realest evaluations follow sister-family relationships, rather than the romantic ones.
I was really looking forward to reading this book based on its premise-Ada, a 26 year old Aussie, enters into situationships with Sadie, and Stuart simultaneously and also has a quarter life crisis. However Ada was a truly unlikable protagonist who didn’t grow up or change in any positive way at all during the book. At the end, nothing had really changed.
This was an engaging story that reads compulsively. Our protagonist, Ada, is an Australian living in London, with her best friend Mel. Ada meets Sadie and Stuart at roughly the same time, and pursues romances with both of them (I was 100% team Sadie). Ada is chaotic, in debt and prone to making very bad decisions, but she's confident and a fun lead character. Her sister had a baby, and part of the book is set in America, where Ada has travelled to be with her sister and her parents. This section was a real highlight of the book. There were also some amazing food descriptions! Each chapter is interspersed with a text conversation which was also a fun detail. An enjoyable read, even if Ada makes decision that will make you hold your head in your hands. #golightly Thanks to Netgalley for an ARC. Opinions are my own.
I think "Go Lightly" is a great summer read. Brydie Lee-Kenedys book focuses on Ada, a twenty something Australian living in London as a cabaret performer and sometimes temp, thrilled with her life of adventurous nights out.
Then she falls for Sadie AND Stuart at the same time, but doesn't feel either are worth pursuing. Life continues, family obligations, adulthood creeping in... and Sadie and Stuart learning of each other.
Relatable to the pains of growing up and full of comedic parts. I especially liked the exchanges that happen via text message throughout the book. The way the characters talk to one another and flirt, I think will hit home with many of you. The story of the way Ada interact is with her family and especially her relationship with her sister was a highlight for me.
Coming into one's own, and juggling all of the relationships we have in life, Go Lightly tackles it with a great balance and humor and heart.
this one was a little out of my comfort zone, but i was really excited to pick it up because i have been wanting to read a bit more lit fic. i honestly really enjoyed it. the characters felt really real and vulnerable and chaotic. also having a heavy australian influence was really cool to see. i think this would be perfect for people that love normal people by sally rooney. thank you so much bloomsbury publishing for the gifted copy!
I'm not really sure what to write about this book. It was just a bit... nothing. There wasn't anything especially bad about it, I am sure that there will be readers out there who enjoy it a lot more than I did, but I just found it to be underwhelming. I was constantly waiting for it to 'get good' and it just didn't.
The characters in this book lacked depth for me. Ada didn't seem to really learn anything or grow so by the climax of the story I didn't have any emotional attachment to her and didn't much care what she chose to do. Stuart, considering he was a third of the love triangle (can you call it that? I'm not sure) was not given any backstory at all and perhaps this was the author's intent, but it didn't work for me personally. Sadie, the other love interest, was also not really explored fully and so once again I didn't really care who Ada chose as they were both pretty uninteresting characters.
As for the romance itself, there was definitely potential with Ada and Stuart to have an interesting story together but this did not happen. Sadie and Ada I just found to have no connection at all other than the fact that they are both Australian. It didn't even feel like they liked each other so I didn't buy that they particularly cared what the other one was doing.
Overall, I got to the end of this book feeling nothing at all.
I was so relieved to finish Go Lightly, it made me so anxious and sad. I would normally feel bad about saying that but I felt like it might have been the goal? It was hard to watch someone tripping and falling her way through life expecting it all to work out, only for the book to end with there having been almost no character development. I found all the characters to be grating and every conversation/ interaction excruciatingly painful and awkward. All of this to say I have never lived in a different country so perhaps this is an accurate portrayal of how that would feel. I will also say there was some really funny and quick witted writing and wonderful bisexual representation that I found really refreshing. In the end I think this would fit someone also struggling through their twenties or who perhaps is living abroad while struggling through their twenties.
Thank you to Harper Perennial and Netgalley for the gifted copy!
Mixed feelings about this one. On one hand, it talks beautifully of how familiar relations and friendships are complicated at times, and the struggles of finding your place in the world. On the other hand, I hated Stuart with a passion, he was so whiny 💀