Joséphine
Written on Mar 25, 2014
See, packing decades into a single book when the previous books only dealt with one year or even less each made for a very cumbersome read. The humour I so fondly remembered from the earlier books was completely lost in Now I'll Tell You Everything. There were a couple of amusing moments but they only lasted half a page or a page at most. There was no space to allow any one moment to breathe. It felt constricting reading the book right from the first 50 pages, which made me groan, knowing I had close to 500 more pages to go.
Nonetheless, I laboured on because I kept up with Alice all these years since I first picked up my first book in 6th grade. Whenever a new book in the series was published, I'd look out for it at the library. Since this book was the last, I figured I might as well finish it. Altogether, I'd say, maybe 50 to 60 pages were worth reading. The rest of the book could hardly hold my interest.
Those who grew up with the series might read this last book for the sake of it but those who've never picked up an Alice book before, this is not the place to start. Better to go back to the earlier books, even if they feel dated since they're set in the 90s. Now I'll Tell You Everything came across more like an anthology of the rest of Alice's life. Each chapter came across as the plan or summary for a fully-fledged book, so that is what Now I'll Tell You Everything was to me: a highly condensed summary of books that'll never be written.
I would've preferred if the bulk of the book would've focused on Alice's college years, maybe a couple of years until after graduation when her career path and love life have been sorted out. The rest could've been left to fans' imaginations. I think cutting away the second half of the book would've given more space for character development, and could've better shown how Alice matured. After all, the previous books were about her growing up. Being actually grown up could've been left in an epilogue of sorts.