Reviewed by clementine on
I've heard amazing things about this book from all over the internet, so I didn't hesitate to buy it on Boxing Day. I was pretty excited to get to it, too, after all the glowing praise.
Ultimately, though, I think it fell into that trap of marketing itself as a love story that's different and unique. It's not, really. Strip back all the extraneous stuff, and it's just a melodramatic teen love story.
I didn't hate it, obviously. I liked both Eleanor and Park. I liked the supporting characters. I haven't liked fictional parents as much as I liked Park's parents in ages. His mom's progression was very realistic and touching, and I just really liked his dad a lot from the get-go. Their relationship was interesting to me - more so than the one I was supposed to care about. Eleanor and Park were both compelling characters, and I appreciated that they weren't perfect. It was neither "nerd gets the hot girl" or "two miserable losers fall in love". They both experienced their own issues, but they were well-rounded and interesting.
But together? I didn't care that much. Their romance didn't feel authentic to me. The whole thing was built on this quirkiness, this mountain of band names. The progression and pacing of it was so odd - they were doing the whole melodramatic "I need you" thing within a few days, but it took them forever to even kiss? It was just weird.
I guess I just felt like the book never got deep enough for me. For the most part, it felt quite superficial. I was interested in their individual stories, but their romance just wasn't that exciting to me.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 31 January, 2014: Finished reading
- 31 January, 2014: Reviewed