I liked this waaaaaaaaaaay more than I thought I would. And it I devoured it in a hot second, so I'm giving it 4 stars, but I do feel like the book is filled with flaws.
I bought this on a whim, without knowing much about the plot and not having read any reviews. And I think that helped manage my expectations a lot.
First, I feel like this hit every romantic nerve in my body, but I wouldn't consider this book a Romance. The ambience that it presents speaks to my heart like very few things do. My 20s have been marked by music festivals. I started working full time. All of my friends and I graduated uni. We got jobs in different cities, demanding, time consuming jobs. I became so responsible I'm still amazed at myself sometimes. I work hard. But for a few times a year, we take days off together and go to every music festival that we can. And we dance and shout and drink and sing like there's no tomorrow. I honestly can't describe what being in a mass of people high on adrenaline all chanting along to the same lines, jumping like crazy, making the ground on México City tremble like we are on the middle of a 7 scale Richter earthquake does to me, but I've always figured that's as close as I'm ever going to get to being religious. I worship on the church of a bass shredding whats left of my eardrums and I sing my devotion away with three day alcohol and smoke induced hoarseness on my voice.
So, you could say this book got to me.
"Sounds like Summer" turned out to be way more serious that I thought it would be. The colourful, cheery cover and the catchy title deceive you. The book presents a main character with depression and a slew of consequences from it that I think were handled superbly, realistically and respectfully. Lux is a science geek and fond of nudiebranches and fan of bands with cool names. And I think she's one of the best main characters I've read in a long while. But if you are looking for a happy feeling vibe in the book, then you'll be disappointed.
While being an incredibly earnest book with a character with depression, the book is (maybe unintentionally?) really funny. Micah and Lux start interacting on the first chapter (and all the way to the end!) and their conversations are always engrossing. I give mad respect to the author for presenting another female character that for a moment there I thought would fall into the stereotypical "another woman" friend, that turned out to be anything but. I love how Lux, our main character, has the same prejudiced first impression and I love that we were shown this and how she's proven wrong. I also feel that the way Micah and Lux spend the weekend away does lend itself to a believable path of connection in such a short spam of time. Nothing felt "insta" even though that's exactly what it is. And the fact that I'm not laughing at or questioning it by the end of the book speaks to the craft with which the author wrote a convincingly good start to the relationship.
But that's also why I feel this isn't a Romance. The book is just the beginning of something more. And that's it. The ending is barely a start. It's fitting and it's real and it's credible and everything in this book happens organically, but I personally wouldn't even give this a HFN, let alone a HEA stamp.
Don't get me wrong, I loved it. And it has basically all of the elements that I look for in a Romance, except that this book is about Lux. Not about Micah and Lux together. Still, who hasn't felt like a mosh pit full of sweaty people singing along to the exact same lines as you are while your body is completely electrified and your brain is rattled and there's barely enough air to breathe is the most thrilling thing ever? I have. And if you haven't I can't recommend the experience enough. It is also the exact place and moment I can honestly believe in sparks flying. I feel like if you haven't kissed the fuck out of someone while being jostled by a crowd going berserk around you, with the soundtrack of your life playing at 120 decibels, you haven't lived.
I only have a couple of niggles, which are honestly tiny and irrelevant and those are that I didn't like Lux's brother (for various reasons) and that there's some grammar errors and misspells that are noticeable.
Last but not least, another fantastic thing about this book that it is set in the Philippines!!!
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