This book was hard. Not as hard as I though it would be, but definitely hard. What you do matter to other people, it can influence their lives. Even insignificant events, maybe those are not that insignificant to everyone. Reading this book, I thought a lot about high school and primary school and I...
I did go into this book knowing it was going to push buttons but still found myself horrified and fascinated. This book does push the limits on the dark side of high school but it completely believable, it reminds us that we all turned a blind eye at one time and didn't realise how much damage it...
This is a reread for me. I have read the original novel many years ago, and I still remember the emotions that ran through me as I followed Clay as he listened to the tapes that changed his life forever. This is a heavy topic and I loved the way that Jay Asher handled it, it’s not easy to talk about...
This was so very... ordinary... for an Asher book. I've come to expect great things from him and I could not put down his previous two books. But it's a nice Christmas read, I guess.
Sierra's family owns a Christmas tree farm which they go to every year for the Christmas season to live and work for a month. This move brings mixed feelings for Sierra. She loves the tree farm and has a close friend who lives there, but she also misses her friends in her other home while she's away...
Clay Jensen returns home from school to find a package with his name on it, and with no return address, on his front porch. There are several cassette tapes inside recorded by Hannah Baker - his classmate and crush. Hannah committed suicide two weeks earlier. As he listens to the tapes, he learns th...
I loved Thirteen Reason’s Why so when I heard that Jay Asher had a new book coming out I knew I had to read it. The story centers on Sierra, her family lives in Oregon growing Christmas trees which the family sells in California every year. Sierra loves both of these worlds, her friends in Oregon an...
Quick review for a somewhat quick read. Jay Asher’s “What Light” was a decent story, but ultimately I didn’t find it so memorable that I’d carry it with me for long after I reached the ending. Part of the reason for this was that the pacing of the story dragged far more than it probably could’ve don...
Im Jahr 1996 bekommt Emma ihren ersten Computer geschenkt und freut sich darauf, sich endlich eine Emailadresse einzurichten. Doch da entdeckt sie im Internet etwas, das es gar nicht geben kann. Ihre eigene Facebookseite. Eine Seite von ihr selbst, als 31jährige!Von der ersten Seite an wird man zurü...
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