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howlinglibraries 's review for:
Hidden Heartbreak
by Emma Lee
All I knew, going into this, was that Hidden Heartbreak was originally a woman's comics about the end of a bad relationship, and that it had been turned into this collection. I'm no stranger to crappy breakups or relationships with toxic people, so I figured I'd give it a whirl, but I can't say I enjoyed it enough to recommend it much.
The toxic relationship featured is actually incredibly similar to one I was in some time back—like, jarringly similar—so it isn't that I didn't relate or "get" the point, it's just that I couldn't bring myself to care. Fussing about how someone told you they were emotionally unavailable, proceeded to give you mixed signs for a while, and then ditched you in the end because you got attached anyways? Of course that's an awful, painful, brutal place to be in, but... how does one get 200+ pages of comics out of it?
I truly don't mean to sound so callous. I'm sorry the author was hurt so badly, and I genuinely do feel for her. Like, I'm a broken record here, but the relationship I was in was literally almost identical to what she details in this collection! But honestly... had I written an entire book about it, it would have done exactly what I think it did to this author: gave her an opportunity to mire in misery for a long, long time instead of moving on and recognizing that, at the end of the day, when someone tells you they don't want what you're offering in a relationship, at some point, you have to protect yourself and accept that they're probably telling the truth.
On a less preachy note, I also just really, really did not care for the art style. It isn't lacking in creativity or talent, it's just one that I'm very much not a fan of.
Thank you so much to Andrews McMeel Publishing for providing me with this ARC in exchange for an honest review!
The toxic relationship featured is actually incredibly similar to one I was in some time back—like, jarringly similar—so it isn't that I didn't relate or "get" the point, it's just that I couldn't bring myself to care. Fussing about how someone told you they were emotionally unavailable, proceeded to give you mixed signs for a while, and then ditched you in the end because you got attached anyways? Of course that's an awful, painful, brutal place to be in, but... how does one get 200+ pages of comics out of it?
I truly don't mean to sound so callous. I'm sorry the author was hurt so badly, and I genuinely do feel for her. Like, I'm a broken record here, but the relationship I was in was literally almost identical to what she details in this collection! But honestly... had I written an entire book about it, it would have done exactly what I think it did to this author: gave her an opportunity to mire in misery for a long, long time instead of moving on and recognizing that, at the end of the day, when someone tells you they don't want what you're offering in a relationship, at some point, you have to protect yourself and accept that they're probably telling the truth.
On a less preachy note, I also just really, really did not care for the art style. It isn't lacking in creativity or talent, it's just one that I'm very much not a fan of.
Thank you so much to Andrews McMeel Publishing for providing me with this ARC in exchange for an honest review!