by Katie M. Stout
I don’t know what I originally read this book for.Maybe it was all those years ago when I was really interested in that side of the world. Asian culture, but mostly Asian food.Maybe it was that time I read North of Beautiful but Justina Chen, and thought I may be getting the same wonderful experienc...
***This review has also been posted on The Social PotatoThe only reason this book wasn't a nightmare for me was because it was strangely addictive and it was more comically bad (in my opinion), than rage-worthy bad.Grace is a young, rich, privileged, lady who chose to go to a boarding school in Sout...
Oh, this book. So much hope and…. Yeah, didn’t work. To be honest, the review pre-release of Hello, I Love You hadn’t been great, BUT I decided to give it an honest try anyway since my knowledge on Korea is very low. The result. It wasn’t as bad (to me at least) as the reviews were making it ...
Received this book from the publisher/Netgalley in exchange of an honest review.Since I am not up to doing difficult things with gifs, if you want to see the gifs I put in the first part of the review, check my blog.I know, the blurb said there would be enough trouble brewing at the horizon, but ser...
A romantic pop star fantasy with a heartbreaking splash of drama that just happens to happen in Korea. How is it that a semi-celebrity country girl from Nashville ends up in South Korea, at a remote boarding school when she doesn’t have any real knowledge/interest of the country or it’s customs? Gra...
Review to come
Initial reaction:I'll say this though, in some meditation: I understand that Grace is a young woman who's pretty much a fish out of water in the country of Korea, escaping a really heavy burden that she carries with her from the States, but I do not, I seriously DO NOT, understand her cultural intol...