After my best friend said that this book was a cute and light-hearted book to add to my reading list, I did just that. I added Emily Henry's novel, Beach Read, to my list. I slowly began reading it and agreed with said friend. I ultimately finished the book on an airplane to Florida, and I was a little disappointed. It was a very cute book, but I am hesitant to say it was a good book. SPOILERS AHEAD!!!
The book began with January losing her father and discovering that he had been living two separate lives with anther woman. Her dad leaves January his second house and lets her sell everything to make money. January is a published writer and now experiences severe writers block because her brain has a lot of questions that will never be answered. Once she makes it to North Bear Shores, Michigan to her fathers house, she is greeted by her college rival, Augustus Everett, whom she also had a major crush on. They discover that they are both suffering from writers block and make a bet to see if they could write a book in the other's genre. January is a romantic author, and Gus is a dreary, drama and realistic fiction author. They try to help the other by going on "research days" to fully immerse themselves in the unfamiliar drama.
Over time, they begin to reignite the college flames and January discovers that Gus has always had a crush on her, even now. They continue on their "research days" falling for each other and find relationships bumps that they need to navigate through.
Now to the good stuff. I could tell that each of the the characters had tremendous growth throughout the novel. January found some closure over her father's death and managed to cope, and Gus was able to work through his communication and trust issues. However, the storyline was not my favorite. I did not find anything within the novel that set it apart from any other romance novel, There were several times that I was disgusted by the overly cheesy lines that Henry included. There was a lot of work put into the story of Gus and January, but all of the other characters seemed to serve no purpose. There was very little thought put into them and their scenes seemed very rushed. An example of this is with January's best friend, Shady, who visited her mid story and mid crisis. The encounter was very glanced over and did not show the friendship as all it was hyped up to be.
I think that this book is perfect for anyone who wants a quick and easy read. But if you are looking for something in-depth or thought-provoking, you should probably walk away from this one. I was very disappointed by this book and I thought it had a lot more potential with the subplots than Henry included. I'm not sure that I would recommend this book to anyone, but if I did I would make sure to emphasize the shallowness of it.
Rating: 1.5/5 Stars
Thanks for the honest review, Peyton. Too bad you didn't like it, but that happens every once in a while. After I read your review I looked the book up on Amazon. It gets a lot of great reviews, but there were some one stars with similar thoughts to yours. The plot seems intriguing, but it just doesn't seem like the author pulled it off the way it was intended.
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