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326 pages, Kindle Edition
First published September 15, 2015
Like all stories, the one you're about to read is a love story.
If it wasn't, what would be the point?
Arden had just never imagined that when she threw Lindsey a life jacket, she would be drowning herself.
Even now, though, years later, Arden identified that feeling. The moment between certainty and mystery, safety and soaring.
“Yes,” Arden said.


"Other people matter hugely. But you have to matter to yourself, too. There has to be a balance. I'm still figuring out that balance, myself. But I know this one thing : sacrificing everything that you care about in order to make another person happy is not love."






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"Like all stories, the one you're about to read is a love story."
"Love means sometimes sacrificing the things you want in order to make someone else happy. It means being there for someone, even when maybe you don't feel like it, because they need you."
"You were promised a love story. And this is mine."
Like all stories, the one you are about to read is a love story. If it wasn't, what would be the point?
And the fact that it also ends with similar words, it seems only right that I had assumed that this book was going to be a love story. And I guess, in the end, it was.... just not at all in the way you were probably expecting. What struck me the most about this story was the fact that I came away from it really enjoying the book as a whole, whilst seemingly hating all of the characters. It just goes to show the kind of writer that Sales is, she can write those flawed characters that make you want to shake them, but they're real. I appreciate real characters, even if I do want to reach into my book and whack them all upside the head.
What Peter needed was someone like Arden.
No.
He didn't need someone like Arden. He needed Arden.
She sat up. Peter needed her - and why shouldn't he have her?
For one thing, he was Asian. Arden had just assumed he would be white, like she was, like almost everyone in Cumberland was. She felt immediately guilty for expecting, however subconsciously, that everyone she met would look like her.
That was an eye opening moment for me because I realised that, up until that very point, I'd also been picturing Peter as white, subconsciously. I'm terrible at picturing characters in my head, I usually just see them as blobs. But I realise that, unless it's stated otherwise, I think I might subconsciously imagine the characters as white as well. Sales hit on something that I feel is true for a lot of people, we sort of project ourselves on to the characters sometimes, and imagine them being like us in some ways. It was a brilliant point and I felt just as guilty as Arden did for assuming... We already covered above what happens when you assume - you make an ass out of u and me!
Maybe loving somebody means simply they bring out the best in you, and you bring out the best in them - so that together, you are always the best possible versions of yourselves.
“Maybe loving somebody means simply they bring out the best in you, and you bring out the best in them—so that together, you are always the best possible versions of yourselves.”
