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bibilly's Reviews (336)
informative
sad
medium-paced
era pra ser 4 estrelas, no mínimo 3, mas cá estamos. assim como Kiss Quotient, o começo deste livro tem todo o gás necessário, não só pela dinâmica entre os protagonistas mas também pelo lugar em que eles se encontram na vida: um empresário vietnamita e motoqueiro tatuado recém curado de câncer de testículo conhece, via app de namoro, uma violinista de família chinesa que, no meio do maior bloqueio artístico da sua vida, a fama acidental na internet minguando, prestes a receber um diagnóstico de autismo, se vê em um relacionamento aberto por não saber dizer não (nem para o namorado nem para ninguém), mas ainda disposta a transar com um estranho por vingança. tudo favorecendo um romance com plot e me dando esperanças de um fake dating. mas o fake dating nunca vem. os protagonistas ficam juntos rápido demais e o romance vira um filme de terror, é substituído por um Get Out no espectro autista, quando há duas páginas atrás a família controladora da protagonista (assim como o evento da sua fama repentina) era mais um fantasma do que pessoas reais na vida dela (aka personagens secundários). mas de repente está todo mundo lá, prontos para soltar uma bomba no eixo da narrativa e iniciar uma dupla tortura com a pobi da Ana e o leitor, enquanto Quan é relegado ao papel de muleta. se por um lado o sofrimento descrito não é inverossímil, por outro não era o que eu estava procurando nem algo possível de ser previsto lendo os outros volumes da trilogia (a qual so acompanho pelas reps autista e asiática). tudo isso é piorado pela escrita didática, que parece ser a marca registrada de romances contemporâneos e dá a Heart Principle um tom de depoimento. a nota da autora no final, explicando o quão pessoal a jornada da personagem é para ela, meio que justifica isso, mas não torna a narração satisfatória nem a impede de escorregar no telling-not-showing. na verdade, só confunde ainda mais a classificação da história, que não sabe se é um memoir ou um trabalho de ficção e não dá nenhum aviso desse desvio para o leitor, porque não é como se essa capa gritasse "tortura psicológica em ambiente familiar"... enfim, este livro deve ser o maior erro de marketing do ano: quem está na expectativa vai se decepcionar, quem procura por um romance vai se assustar e quem não receber essa "reviravolta" positivamente vai dar 3 estrelas pela tentativa sem saber ao certo se deveria.
on hold @ 37%
even though this is a contemporary romance, i found myself pretty excited to read it, as the premise is right up my alley: a grumpy boss/sunny PA romance where the boss is a creator of a famous m/m-coded tv show called Leeches and his assistant is a fanfic writer widely known in the Leeches' fandom. add to this mix a small age gap and you have a contemporary romance that's actually good... or maybe not. nothing about the development is clicking for me: not Lewis' manchild attitude, not the british setting, not the boring work travel. nothing besides the story-about-a-story premise. on top of that, the author throws a time jump in their relationship right away. it's a weird case of telling-not-showing. i keep thinking if this book were a fanfic of my favorite ship in bts i would like it better, bc only repeating how hot and brilliant a person is doesn't do much for me. and there's this mystery, about why Lewis is allergic to relationships and disrespectfully honest, that i bet once revealed won't manage to make me feel exactly sympathetic towards him. don't get me wrong, i love a damaged, internally vulnerable, emotionally constipated hero, but The Hating Game traumatized me and now i can't trust romance authors to do the bare minimum, which is: to give their characters plausible reasons to be the way they are.
even though this is a contemporary romance, i found myself pretty excited to read it, as the premise is right up my alley: a grumpy boss/sunny PA romance where the boss is a creator of a famous m/m-coded tv show called Leeches and his assistant is a fanfic writer widely known in the Leeches' fandom. add to this mix a small age gap and you have a contemporary romance that's actually good... or maybe not. nothing about the development is clicking for me: not Lewis' manchild attitude, not the british setting, not the boring work travel. nothing besides the story-about-a-story premise. on top of that, the author throws a time jump in their relationship right away. it's a weird case of telling-not-showing. i keep thinking if this book were a fanfic of my favorite ship in bts i would like it better, bc only repeating how hot and brilliant a person is doesn't do much for me. and there's this mystery, about why Lewis is allergic to relationships and disrespectfully honest, that i bet once revealed won't manage to make me feel exactly sympathetic towards him. don't get me wrong, i love a damaged, internally vulnerable, emotionally constipated hero, but The Hating Game traumatized me and now i can't trust romance authors to do the bare minimum, which is: to give their characters plausible reasons to be the way they are.
fast-paced
o começo é muito satisfatório: zero enrolação e ótima construção de cena. aí depois fica repetitivo e surgem aqueles conflitos exagerados e convenientes de romance contemporâneo que transformam personagens secundários em marionetes e me jogam de volta pra vida real, mas nada que deixe o livro intragável (porém a smut perde total a graça na medida em que o romance enfraquece, o que não demora). não posso reclamar do insta love porque se eu fosse bonita, rica, produtiva e genial e encontrasse numa lista de catálogo masculino alguém que se encaixasse perfeitamente em minhas preferências e se encantasse até com minhas excentricidades tb me apaixonaria fácil ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ além disso, a troca de papéis de gênero no quesito renda e profissão é bem feita e bem-vinda, ainda que puxada pro wish fulfillment. no geral, este livro é bem melhor que bride test, primeiro que li da trilogia, a qual so comecei mesmo pela rep autista e asiática (inclusive demorei pra perceber que a protagonista é branca oO).
fast-paced
i gave all the books in this trilogy 3 stars, but there was a lot of 4 stars moments in them. i particularly loved the humanization of Lydia and the focus on Pemberley. this last volume is the weakest and darcybeth's interactions could've been more iconic in the three of them (it's Pemberley after all); however, Elizabeth Adams' writing is pretty solid overall and she seems to know the characters well enough. i might even read her other P&P variations, especially if they're as short as these ones, and even though i would prefer smut scenes to the talk about babies (and therefore pregnancy) in the epilogues.
fast-paced
fast-paced
i gave all the books in this trilogy 3 stars, but there were a lot of 4 stars moments in them. i particularly loved the humanization of Lydia and the focus on Pemberley. the last volume is the weakest and darcybeth's interactions could've been more iconic in the three of them (it's Pemberley after all); however, Elizabeth Adams' writing is pretty solid overall and she seems to know the characters well enough. i might even read her other P&P variations, especially if they're as short as these, and even though i would prefer smut scenes to the talk about babies (and therefore pregnancy) in the epilogues.
uma pena o único defeito na performance da rosamund pike ser logo a voz do darcy, mas não deixa de ser uma ótima introdução ao formato. quanto à história em si, dessa vez terminei a releitura preferindo o final do filme: além do corte do diálogo no segundo pedido de casamento que sempre me incomodou, acho que eu estava mais no clima pra um beijo na mão do darcy que pra observações espirituosas sobre ele e seu noivado.
medium-paced
still searching for a KJ Charles' book as good as Think of England ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ just like in Unfit to Print, the characters' interactions here were borderline didactic. while im immensely grateful to the author for not using miscommunication as a plot device and for making the protagonists act like the adults they are, i wasn't particularly obsessed with their romance and the sex scenes were definitely lacking (i was took out of the story every time Phillip called Guy a virgin). vocatives and "dick" alternatives aside, considering the book's premise falls more or less under the enemies-to-lovers category and the couple is forced into an and-there-was-only-one-country-house type of situation, there should have been more tension going on. im not giving up tho. i appreciate how KJ Charles manages to establish a whole story in such small amounts of pages and getting quickly to the point. besides, i find her uptight leads quite relatable, which makes me think if i were a book character most readers would find me annoying Lol
fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
Character
Strong character development:
No
Loveable characters:
Complicated
Diverse cast of characters:
Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus:
Yes
the concept and the beginning of this book are quite strong: a mix of friends-to-lovers and second chance romance featuring a poc gay couple with nuanced backstories and motivations (e.g., the dialogue about Vik not wanting to visit his homeland, India) brought together by the disappearance of a boy whose family can't count on the official authorities to find him, dead or alive. however, it all eventually goes down the drain as there's no development whatsoever and the external plot's main conflict is resolved off page. if you think about it, there's not even a romance, just one sided pining followed by a drastically change of heart in the course of two days, even though we get both pov's and finding a poor indian boy in Regency London shouldn't be that easy.