After a rough breakup, Alice isn't sure she ever wants to be in a
relationship again -- until she meets Takumi, who breaks the mental
scale she's used for years to measure cuteness. Alice is bi-romantic
asexual, and unpacking that with any potential romantic partner is
always a lot of work. Plus, Alice and Takumi are immediately such good
friends that she doesn't want to ruin anything. Meanwhile, Alice is
fighting with both her parents (who want her to go to law school, when
she has no interest in that) and her best friends, who are getting
married (to each other) and may be accidentally excluding Alice
sometimes.
There are lots of things to like about this book, but
it has a few issues as well. For the most part, I liked the characters,
especially Alice (which is good, since the reader spends so much time in
her head). She's super cute, and I really want to be her friend. Takumi
is a little too perfect for me to believe in him, and Feenie (Alice's
bestie) is just confusing to me. Lots of people are loving this book for
the diverse representation, which is awesome. Though I can't personally
judge how well it's done, the fact that it exists seems like a good
thing. My main issue with the book was the plot, or lack thereof. If you
require a book with a lot of action and progression, this one probably
isn't for you. Alice does stuff, or more often, avoids stuff, so if
people having problems communicating is a pet peeve for you, this book
also probably isn't your thing (it's a pet peeve for me, but if I didn't
read any books where communication issues were a key point, what would I
read?). I also didn't feel that the ending wrapped things up
particularly well, which is fairly true to life, but doesn't make for an
entirely satisfying reading experience. If you like slice-of-life
stories with diverse representation, give this a try.
(Reviewed from a copy borrowed through my library system.)
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