Title: How Hard Can Love Be? (The Spinster Club #2)
Author: Holly Bourne
Publication Date: February 1st 2016
Publisher: Usborne Publishing Ltd
Part of a Series?: Yes, Book 2/3 of The Spinster Club
I Got A Copy Through: Usborne Publishing (THANK YOU!)
Buy Links: Amazon UK || Foyles || Wordery || Waterstones || The Book Depository || Kobo || Google Books || WHSmith ||
Actual Rating 3.5 stars!
One of the first things that struck me about this book was how EASY it was to slip into it all – Holly Bourne’s writing is simple and yet designed to make you think about all things Feminism, Family and Friendship that I’ve fallen in love.
Author: Holly Bourne
Publication Date: February 1st 2016
Publisher: Usborne Publishing Ltd
Part of a Series?: Yes, Book 2/3 of The Spinster Club
I Got A Copy Through: Usborne Publishing (THANK YOU!)
Buy Links: Amazon UK || Foyles || Wordery || Waterstones || The Book Depository || Kobo || Google Books || WHSmith ||
Blurb Description: Amber, Evie and Lottie: three girls facing down tough issues with the combined powers of friendship, feminism and cheesy snacks. Both hilarious and heart-rending, this is Amber’s story of how painful – and exhilarating – love can be, following on from Evie’s story in Am I Normal Yet?
All Amber wants is a little bit of love. Her mum has never been the caring type, even before she moved to California, got remarried and had a personality transplant. But Amber's hoping that spending the summer with her can change all that.
And then there's prom king Kyle, the guy all the girls want. Can he really be interested in anti-cheerleader Amber? Even with best friends Evie and Lottie's advice, there's no escaping the fact: love is hard.
Actual Rating 3.5 stars!
One of the first things that struck me about this book was how EASY it was to slip into it all – Holly Bourne’s writing is simple and yet designed to make you think about all things Feminism, Family and Friendship that I’ve fallen in love.
Amber has always been the odd duck. She’s 5’11, her mother
left her for a bum-face and skipped continents with him, her father had an
affair and her step-family is horrible and now she’s boarded a plane to fly
across continents to be with the woman who she hasn’t seen in two years.
Combine hyperactive in a camp in the mountains, a mother
with barely any time for her, cliché American Girls who make her blood boil and
a Prom King perfect boy, this book promised to be A WHOLE TON OF FUN!
And it really
truly was.
Until Kyle (aka the
more gorgeous than life Prom King) turned out to be THE BEST HUMAN IN THE WORLD
WITH LITERALLY 0% FLAWS. 0%. ZILCH. He comforted Amber when she was drunk
and puking, he took her on magical trips to National Parks, didn’t mind when
she didn’t kiss him back, he wanted to hear all about her past and apologized
and he also went “OH WE’RE SUCH A CUTE COUPLE.” I’VE MET GUYS. I KNOW PEOPLE.
NOBODY IS THAT PERFECT.
He was too much perfection
and ZERO FLAWS and I honestly
couldn’t even believe/ fathom/ trust/ like him.
Another thing that made me cringe was that ENDING. After TWO YEARS of nothing, and YEARS
BEFORE THAT OF EMOTIONAL ABUSE, all we get is a THREE PAGE TALK? And a one
paragraph apology from her mother. THAT’S IT. MEH.
Amber storyline with
her mother was one of the things I LOVED THE MOST because like Amber, I’m a
repressor. I have so much stuff pent up inside me that I WON’T SAY OUT LOUD
and I GET WHAT IT MEANS TO BE LIKE THAT. And for all that GREAT STORY to end
with practically nothing felt off. And wrong. And that THE TOO PERFECT FOR LIFE
PROM KING KYLE was more important than her mother. REALLY?
If I shove all that aside, because this all turned into something
frustrating only in the end, there are a LOT of great things about the book.
1. THE SETTING: I don’t think I’ve
read enough books with camps or fun nature stuff but I REALLY TRULY LOVED THE
SETTING. Also, there were so many Harry Potter references and hyperactive
little kinds (I get it, I’ve got cousins) and camp was SUCH A FUN PLACE TO BE.
2. THE FEMINISM: Everyone’s
definitely had that one girl who you just NEED TO HATE – and the ladies of the
Spinster Club handle it BEAUTIFULLY. It’s all about supporting women, and not
hating/ being jealous of other women no matter how different you are and I
REALLY LOVE THE WAY IT WAS HANDLED.
3. THE EASINESS OF THE WRITING: Like
I said when I started this review, this book was a REALLY EASY READ. HONESTLY.
I think it’s the fastest book I’ve read in 2017 despite the fact that it’s
almost 500 pages long. It was an easy and fun story to slip into.
Honestly, I SO
BADLY WISH that the ending was extended and handled better. I wish that
there was more of a reconciliation and bonding between Amber and her mother, I
wish Kyle was LIKE 0% FLAWED because that would have made How Hard Can Love Be? One of my best reads of the year.
Definitely worth a read for a few smiles, and some thought
provoking feministic ideas but I KNOW it could have been better.
Have you read this series yet? Does it get even better? Who's your favourite - Evie, Lottie or Amber?
What are some AWESOME (fictional) books on with a strong feminism theme that you've read?
I can't wait to hear from you!
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