In Paris With You by Clementine Beauvais

In Paris With You

by Clementine Beauvais

Eugene and Tatiana could have fallen in love. If things had gone differently. If they had tried to really know each other. If it had just been them, and not the others. But that was years ago and time has found them far apart, leading separate lives.

Until they meet once more in Paris.

What really happened back then? And now? Could they ever be together after everything?

Reviewed by Sam@WLABB on

4 of 5 stars

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What if fate brought you and the one-you-threw-away back together, a decade after that bad decision?

Eugene and Tatiana were serendipitously reunited on the Metro after ten years apart. The meeting reawakened old feelings for both - some good, some bad. Beauvais beautifully explored these emotions, as well as inviting us back to the summer they spent together.

I thought the way Beauvais used verse to tell the story had a great impact on the delivery, and quickly created a blanket of emotions over me. The writing was lovely and lyrical, and I was impressed with how well she captured and created certain feelings for me.

One of my favorite characters was Lesky. He was the embodiment of all those heightened teen feelings you have. A teen Tatiana complemented him quite well, though she brought more of a youthful, starry-eyed exuberance to the tale.

This book was listed under YA, but for me, it's an adult novel. There are flashbacks to that summer, when the characters were 14 and 17, but the summer was viewed and the commentary attached was from that of adults.

It was about second chances and taking chances. It's about realizing you were young and wrong and made mistakes. It's about getting an opportunity to fix those mistakes, and it made me both smile and cry.

Though I was a little disappointed with the ending, I did enjoy the journey I took with Eugene and Tatiana, and I can imagine what came next.

*ARC provided in exchange for an honest review.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 27 December, 2018: Finished reading
  • 27 December, 2018: Reviewed