tonya.'s Reviews > Lola and the Boy Next Door
Lola and the Boy Next Door (Anna and the French Kiss, #2)
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tonya.'s review
bookshelves: 2011, favorites, favorites-of-2011, romance, ya, arcs, swoons, contemporary
Jan 23, 2011
bookshelves: 2011, favorites, favorites-of-2011, romance, ya, arcs, swoons, contemporary
Here's the thing. I think Stephanie Perkins is in my head. Or at least my daydreams. How else could she consistently write characters that seem to be tailor-made to hit my flutter buttons? Etienne for my anglophilia, Max for my tattooed, Buddy Holly glasses wearing (view spoiler) rocker boy, and Cricket. Cricket for everything I've ever wanted in a real boy.
Because that's the beauty of Lola and the Boy Next Door. It's real. As much as I loved Anna and the French Kiss (and I looooooooooooooooooooove Anna), Lola was better on nearly every level because it felt real. Anna was by no means a fairy tale without the struggle of realism, but there were some elements that took it to daydream level. Paris. Beautiful, charming British boy. The big, dramatic (incredibly swoontastic) ending.
Lola is different. They aren't in Paris, and Cricket isn't a dashing, gorgeous Brit. He's just a normal boy. A normal, awkward, amazingly sweet boy who I can't even find words to describe. (Except for, you know, those...)
I won't say anything about the story itself, except Stephanie Perkins manages to surprise me with the depth she gives her characters and their circumstances. Lola made me ache; I went through each moment of impulse, confusion, and agonizing indecision with her. I laughed with her, I certainly cried with her more than I expected to, and I swooned so hard that by the last section I was literally reading standing up because I was FEELING TOO MANY FEELINGS to sit.
Lola and the Boy Next Door is everything first love should be--painful, awkward, desperate, tender and so, so sweet.
And as I read Perkins' acknowledgements at the end, I found myself tearing up again at her note to her husband. I realized why she is able to write such amazingly real and heartfelt love stories. It's because she's lived it.
Lola and the Boy Next Door comes out in September. I can't wait to swoon with you!
Because that's the beauty of Lola and the Boy Next Door. It's real. As much as I loved Anna and the French Kiss (and I looooooooooooooooooooove Anna), Lola was better on nearly every level because it felt real. Anna was by no means a fairy tale without the struggle of realism, but there were some elements that took it to daydream level. Paris. Beautiful, charming British boy. The big, dramatic (incredibly swoontastic) ending.
Lola is different. They aren't in Paris, and Cricket isn't a dashing, gorgeous Brit. He's just a normal boy. A normal, awkward, amazingly sweet boy who I can't even find words to describe. (Except for, you know, those...)
I won't say anything about the story itself, except Stephanie Perkins manages to surprise me with the depth she gives her characters and their circumstances. Lola made me ache; I went through each moment of impulse, confusion, and agonizing indecision with her. I laughed with her, I certainly cried with her more than I expected to, and I swooned so hard that by the last section I was literally reading standing up because I was FEELING TOO MANY FEELINGS to sit.
Lola and the Boy Next Door is everything first love should be--painful, awkward, desperate, tender and so, so sweet.
And as I read Perkins' acknowledgements at the end, I found myself tearing up again at her note to her husband. I realized why she is able to write such amazingly real and heartfelt love stories. It's because she's lived it.
Lola and the Boy Next Door comes out in September. I can't wait to swoon with you!
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Reading Progress
January 23, 2011
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Started Reading
June 21, 2011
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Finished Reading
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Nalnac
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rated it 2 stars
Jun 21, 2011 11:58AM

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I knew someone would be. I'm so proud it was you. ;)

Also, your review is great. And already Anna has a 10/10 mark from me, how much better can it be?

This statement right here is what encompasses a great book. And you ma'am have written a great review. I cannot wait to read Lola, and you have just increased that need 100x more.

As you know the delicate flower that I am...this will not leave me a sobbing mess, will it?

Tonya wrote, "I swooned so hard that by the last section I was literally reading standing up because I was FEELING TOO MANY FEELINGS to sit."
This statement sums up my emotional standpoint on Lola. You are amazing. Your review is amazing. Stephanie Perkins is amazing. And Lola and the Boy Next Door is amazing. :-)

*nods head* YEP! It made her "insides glow with happy warmth" << her words not mine ;o)
*clap hands excitedly* well done tata!

As you know the delicate flower that I am...this will not leave me a sobbing mess, will it?"
No, not at all! There are some heartichokey moments, but it's not a sad book by any means. You'll be fine and I know you'll swoon over Cricket as much as I did. <3

Oh, thank you so much! In a way, I was glad to be able to review without many details. There is just so much I could say about how these characters touched me that I would ramble on and on and on if given the opportunity. :)
Stephanie Perkins *is* amazing! I can't wait for Isla! I know somehow she'll find a way to top even Cricket.











