Follow Tulip and her friends through a series of adventures and mishaps, as they struggle with exams, friends, enemies, angry teachers and scheming rivals on the last day of semester. A story of friendship, love, loyalty and betrayal, told with a dash of humour and mischief - relive the moments of glory and pain that constitute the experience of growing up.
Nupur Chowdhury is the author of The Aeriel Chronicles and The Brightest Trilogy. Apart from novels, she enjoys writing poetry and the occasional short story. She was four when she started writing. Now, over 20 years later, it’s more an addiction than a hobby.
Nupur likes coffee, street food, fanfiction, and sleep. She dislikes yogurt, slow internet, unnecessary cliffhangers, and being woken up in the morning.
You can find her on Wattpad, Facebook, and Amazon. And if you can’t, it’s probably because she’s busy sleeping.
For the latest bookish news, offers, and updates, you can join her mailing list here: http://eepurl.com/gHkO2j
This is a story of an ordinary day in school, about an ordinary group of friends, and yet nothing about it felt ordinary to me. To sum up my impression about this book in one word, it was refreshing. Tulip and her seven friends; one is a bookworm, another is a rebel, an animal-lover, a troublemaker, a pretty belle, a charmer and a brooder. Spending a day with this motley crew of miscreants, what can possibly go wrong? Well, a lot of things actually; but it can never get terribly boring with them around. Really, if my school life was even half as exciting I'd have cried buckets of tears during graduation.
I liked how perfectly the author caught the way of interaction between the high school friends, the effortless camaraderie between close-knit friends who're willing to take that extra step to help each other out. Also, while handling eight different major characters, she managed to establish unique personalities for each of them; even going as far as to make them relatable. And the simplicity of the writing made the story flow seamlessly, carrying with it an undertone of nostalgia. One thing she knew for certain, however, was that her friends had now become an integral part of her life, and that they would always remain so, no matter where she was or what she did.
Filled with blithe humour and playful interactions: “If I didn’t know any better, I’d say someone upstairs was trying to give them a divine kick in the ass!”; and with one of the sweetest epilogue. This was a very promising read and promptly made its way to my Favourites’ shelf.
My thanks to the author for providing me with a copy of this story in exchange for an honest review.
I was gifted this book in exchange for an honest review, so here goes; The book opens with a crowd of teens on the school bus, and the reader is introduced to the main characters. Tulip is well described and I warmed to her instantly. For me personally, I would have liked a bit more excitement at the start, but I get that maybe that wouldn't fit with the style. The story continues in an easy, fluent, well written manner, pulling out friendships, loves, exams and all the other things that make up high school! In all, it is a sweet, amusing book, and I would certainly read more from this author.
*I was sent a copy of this book by the very author, Nupur Chowdhury, in exchange for honest review so here is it:
4 stars
This book is about high school and teenagers on the verge of adolescence who are not adult but not quite children, either. It is about love and friendship and thing teenagers mostly do: have fun, make problems and explore things new to them. It shows us what high schoolers go through and where their hormones sometimes get them lol.
All in one, I liked this book since it was pretty good. It is quite short so it took me a few hours to read it. It's perfect for the summer since it's nice and easy read.
I would recommend it to everyone out there, people all ages and not just the young adults :)
P.S. Let's support indie authors! The author of this book published it herself and I think that's amazing so you should check it out.
The title explains a lot. The Classroom Effect is all about teenagers and all the conflicts related. Reading this, I felt like how time flies and how much I miss those moments. I feel old now. Anyway, the plot is well built as well as the main character. I found myself smile a bit as I realized I experienced some of those back in the days. This is a light reading, dedicated to all readers above 15. Glad I read this, to get the confident of where I am standing now.