a good story, well written, interesting characters
A lot of YA books are overly simplistic or try much too hardy to be 'current', including using so much regional teen slang that they're painfully dated.
Breaking Pointe isn't like that. The romance is a bit too fast, and the guy could be seen as invading the girl's privacy by reading her diaries, but his explanation for why he did it holds up, and she lets go of any offense for good reasons. Liam and Lily in some ways switched the usual gender roles--he falls for her first while she's trying to keep a level head; she tries hard to behave honorably, while he is less than honest with her, which gets them both hurt. The difference in their roles helped make this book different and better than a lot of YA. I'm very sick of the love-struck drooling girl trying all kinds of stupid questionable tricks to catch the gorgeous guy's attention.
I liked the parts about dance and Lily's feelings about it. Those felt real--what didn't was reading that Lily transferred into private school as a junior, found out in the first few days that she was way behind everyone else academically, but somehow her need to catch up on academics never got mentioned again. The rest of the book, she had time to rehearse all evening and go out on weekends, but never seemed to spend any extra time studying. I get the author cared most about the dance parts, but the story needs to stay in real life too.
I'll try not to make this a spoiler: The original stalker subplot was fine, but making it worse the way Woodland did felt like too much. One or the other type of incident happening, okay, but not both and certainly not together.
All in all it was a read in one sitting book, and I look forward to picking up some of her other books.