You only get one first time…
From driving tests to relationships, Valentina Bell thinks she’s a failure, with a big fat capital F. At this rate, she’s certain she’ll be a virgin forever. So Lena’s friends plan Operation: Popping the Cherry to help her find the perfect first time. Yet somehow disastrous dates with bad boy musicians and fabulous evenings with secretly in-the-closet guys aren’t quite working out how Lena planned.
Soon Lena’s avoiding Operation: Popping the Cherry to spend time with comforting, aloof Jake, her best friend’s older brother ,who doesn’t make her feel self-conscious about still clinging to her V card. But could Jake show Lena that sometimes what you’re looking for most is right by your side?
A Forever for the 21st Century
Praise for Aurelia B Rowl'Popping the Cherry stole my heart for Lena and Jake’s hilarious, heart-melting and crazy romance. I highly recommended Popping the Cherry for getting your forever love the first time.' – I Heart YA Books
'Popping the Cherry didn’t disappoint, it exceeded expectations – a lot!' – Luna's Little Library
'From the minute I began reading Popping the Cherry I was hooked, I love that the book is so British, even down to all the British swear words and slang. The characters were instantly likeable and believable, and I found myself falling into the pages and not wanting to come up for air.' – Much Loved Books
'A fun, quick read' – Page After Page
'A cute and fun romance.' – Always YA at Heart
- ISBN13 9781472018052
- Publish Date 19 September 2013
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country GB
- Imprint Carina
- Format eBook (EPUB)
- Pages 304
- Language English
- URL http://harpercollins.co.uk
Reviews
Leah
Popping The Cherry is touted as a Forever for the 21st Century, but I haven’t actually read Forever so I’m not 100% sure it is. I suspect it is not, though. I can see the similarities from reading both synopses, but they’re really not the same at all. I wanted a fun, cheery read about losing your virginity, I didn’t want a read that showed that peer pressure is alive and kicking and people will happily go along with it for no reason whatsoever. I felt the whole virginity intervention to be slightly insulting, and I was disappointed that Lena didn’t tell her so-called friends that it was a stupid idea and she wasn’t going to do it. Being a virgin isn’t something to be embarrassed about, and it made me so sad that Lena’s friends were so adamant she had to pop her cherry ASAP. Maybe that was meant to be the point, that Lena was a sheep and that being a sheep is wrong, but I don’t know.
Another thing that I found utterly bizarre is there are a series of incidents that Lena ends up being part of – things that I found to be so, so farfetched. How on Earth can one person find themselves stranded in the middle of the road and chased by two men, potentially drowning in a swimming pool, and then getting into a sticky situation with a boy. I could have maybe accepted one of the situations, but three just made the book feel untenable. Lena just found herself all the time in these unimaginable situations, she was a magnet and it felt as if the novel was trying to be a YA/Crime hybrid novel and that’s not what the synopsis promised and it just made the plot seem disjointed with all of these events occurring.
What I did really love about the novel, though, was the friendship between Lena and Jake. Jake was an amazing character and I wished Lena had been a bit more mature when it came to Jake because there were times their little age gap seemed like such a bigger one. I could’ve read a whole novel dedicated to just Jake, he was a brilliant character and he made the book for me. I was hoping for such high things of Popping The Cherry and I was so disappointed that it didn’t really work for me, because I really wanted it to. I’d definitely read one of Aurelia’s books again, but Popping The Cherry just tried too hard to do too much, and I was disappointed that it spent more time on the crime-y aspect than it did on Lena’s quest to lose her virginity, something I didn’t really agree with in the first place, if only for the whole peer pressure aspect, when really it should have done the opposite, showing that despite Lena’s pressure, she would stand up to her friends. Sadly not.