ladygrey
Written on Dec 5, 2009
Ashley Stockingdale has the emotional maturity of a twelve year old, as do all of the characters in this book. Her point of view on men, her reactions to the guys around her, to her friends, to her family, the way she handled conflict and difficulty all reflected the point of view of a very young, very inexperienced girl, however much she lamented being 32.
Even more difficult, however was how painfully trite Ashley's faith was. More often that not it was self-righteous, judgemental, horribly simplistic skimming the surface of life and herself. The "Christian" expectations she placed on herself and others reflected more of society's constructs than a genuine faith with any depth.
I think the primary flaw is that it was written by a woman trying to write a generation she clearly doesn't understand in the first person; placing her story in a very dated late 90s time frame; without any depth or real substance.