What I Loved About This Book: It deals with a topic that most authors avoid: domestic violence among teens. The statistics don't lie. Most DV cases are between teenagers. And this book did a good job of showing the devolving of a girl who thought she could fix her boyfriend. The style was a nice cha...
Read This Review & More Like It At Ageless Pages ReviewsYou can pry the ship of Olivia and Zoey out of my cold dead hands. I am so unbelievably in love with them as a couple and I’m desperately invested in their relationship.And to think I almost missed out on this book entirely because the cover an...
As soon as I read the blurb for this, I had to read it. Loving the conflict of taboo relationships myself, I’m always interested when another writer takes it on. Amanda Grace handles the orientation issue deftly, with the issue focused on this particular relationship and not on what it means for the...
Note: This review was originally penned on 4/7/2014 and I'm sharing this only for the purposes of posterity as I submit this review. The book will be released on 8/1/2014, and I'll share this review on my blog and other communities closer to the release date. Initial reaction: I feel guilty for s...
I hate books like this. I stay up all night reading them and then, I am so frustrated at the characters I can’t sleep. Let’s talk about Sam first. She has this huge crush on her best and only friend Nick. Now instead of expressing her feeling to Nick, she wants to make him jealous so that he will ...
Sigh. Sad to say i didn't enjoy this as much as I did "But I Love Him".I guess it was because i didn't feel connected with Sam at all for some reason.I didn't feel what she was going through. I couldn't feel her struggles. I didnt feel bad about what was happening to her.There was something missing ...
Every time I see these stories on t.v., everyone’s reaction is,” What a sick ***!” or ” That guy should be neutered.” You know what I think? I think that the girl should get in just in much trouble as the guy. Why? Well, girls now and days act, dress and look much older than what they really are. Th...
"The Truth About You and Me" is the second book I've read from Amanda Grace, and I actually didn't think it was a bad story for the thematics it touched upon, between a story where a 16-year old girl falls for her community college professor and struggles within her own coming of age. But if you wa...
3.5 This is quite the story, and despite the fact I read one similar in theme and being with their teacher not to long ago (Where you Are by Trumble) I still thoroughly enjoyed. I think that Amanda Grace did a good job of painting the picture of how it started, and trying to show that Bennett aka ...
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