Love, Victor is now a major TV series on Dinsey+, set in the world of the hit film Love, Simon
The beloved, award-winning novel is now a major motion picture starring 13 Reasons Why's Katherine Langford and Everything, Everything's Nick Robinson.
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Straight people should have to come out too. And the more awkward it is, the better.
Simon Spier is sixteen and trying to work out who he is - and what he's looking for.
But when one of his emails to the very distracting Blue falls into the wrong hands, things get all kinds of complicated.
Because, for Simon, falling for Blue is a big deal ...
It's a holy freaking huge awesome deal.
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Praise for Simon vs. The Homo Sapiens Agenda:
'Worthy of Fault in Our Stars-level obsession.' Entertainment Weekly
'I love you, SIMON. I LOVE YOU! And I love this fresh, funny, live-out-loud book." Jennifer Niven, bestselling author of All the Bright Places
- ISBN10 014135609X
- ISBN13 9780141356099
- Publish Date 7 April 2015
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country GB
- Imprint Penguin Books Ltd
- Format Paperback (B-Format (198x129 mm))
- Pages 368
- Language English
Reviews
alindstadtcorbeax
*exhales sharply*
Whew! Well, I erm, think I may have gotten something in my eye?
Deciding to read was the best thing thing I have decided to do all damn week. Or like, ever.
Can Simon be my bff? Thank you.
And, subsequently, now I can’t stop smiling or unabashedly dancing around my room to bleachers (re: Love, Simon soundtrack & my earlier update about how much I love bleachers & jack antonoff’s musical genius), so if you’ll excuse me, RTC, I have some dancing to do.
PS: I can’t think of the last time I was this freakin’ happy. Does this book affect everyone this way? Or am I weird? Well I KNOW i’m weird-proudly-tyvm... but you get what I mean.
kiracanread
vagasker
thepunktheory
Oh, all the feels with this one!
I think I read the book within one afternoon. Becky Albertelli created a heartfelt novel that's nothing short of adorable. It's all there, the sad, the happy, the funny and the heartbreaking. I want to give Simon a hug and be his best friend.
Although it's a film focused on a high school situation it doesn't feel like your stereotypical drama situation. There is plenty of drama but it feels realistic instead of those plastic images we so often get with other books or movies.
There's honestly nothing I didn't enjoy about this book.
maggiefan
nannah
This may one of the few times I'm actually looking forward to the movie version. Not to say the book was bad, but there were parts that I enjoyed so little that I'm hoping the movie got rid of them altogether or at least ... just really put as little emphasis on them as possible.
Book content warnings:
homophobia
bullying
gay fetishizing
Using the email account hourtohour.notetonote@gmal.com, 16yo Simon Spier can come out of the closet to someone named Blue and express himself honestly in a way he can't to anyone "irl". Unfortunately, a kid named Martin from drama class sees his email when Simon forgets to log off in the library and blackmails him: help Martin get close to Simon's friend Abby or everyone will know Simon's gay (and worse, because screenshots will be released, Blue is involved in it too).
Basically, it's a messy soup of a high school coming-of-age story mixed with a coming-out story mixed with one hell of an adorable romance. What's not to love?? I honestly stayed up many nights to read a bit longer.
So why the 3.5?
Sometimes the text got to be a tad cringy; I mean, I get it takes a book a few years to get from finished mss to published text, so already you have some outdated slang (e.g. "I can't even"), but some dialogue exchanges could be a bit awkward. I just couldn't imagine kids talking like this, or even the adult characters either. Things just ran a bit stilted.
But the real villain of this book was Leah. An anime-obsessed yaoi-loving gay-fetishizing friend of Simon who was supposed to be an ally??? I don't think so. But this book never changed its stance on her. Simon keeps his opinion that she's like ... the most understanding out of all his friends because she introduced him to "slash fanfiction".
So let me make this clear, as a wlw: people who love yaoi (especially women and especially women who call themselves "fujoshi") basically fetishize gay people, and fetishizers are not allies.
Just like Simon, on page 21, says he thinks gay women have it easier (LOL), because dudes find them hot. Again, fetishizing gay people isn't the same thing as being allies. GOD, this part made me so furious. Almost to the point of quitting the book right there on page 21.
Anyway, despite this (which made me despise every single time Leah showed up in the book), I still loved the book as an easy romantic read. But since it looks like the next book is all about Leah ?? I definitely won't read on. There are enough stuff about gay fetishization out there being seen in a positive light. Yuck.
Pigpen.Reads
Leigha
It breaks my heart to admit I did not love this book. I went into this novel expecting a slam dunk, but instead walked away feeling pretty meh about it. And I honestly do not fault the novel - my reading tastes are changing, meaning books I would have found previously enjoyable are not as entertaining to me anymore.
Listen, this book is cute. Simon is a lovable complex character and a great representation for the LGBTQ+ community. It's refreshing to read about the development of a healthy relationship where the love interests are not each others end all and be all. He and Blue are not defined by their romance. Simon has important, key relationships with friends and family members outside of his romance with Blue and vice versa. Their relationship is definitely the backbone of the novel (and super sweet), but it exists in cohesion with other elements.
I do have one particular quibble. While Simon has three best friends (as well as multiple acquaintances) in this novel, I just didn't feel the friendship between him and Leah. I was expecting her and Simon to be BrOTP goals, and yet she always seemed like such an afterthought - not just to Simon, but to Nick and Abby too. The moments where Simon and her connect felt forced and not authentic.
tl;dr A cute RomCom with complex characters and a fun mystery.