Reviewed by Ashley on
I liked Golden, but I didn't LOVE it
I think the #1 problem was that I over-hyped Golden for myself. It's the book that everyone loved, and I wanted to love, so I went into it expecting to ADORE it, but that didn't quite happen, so I felt the disappointment all the more fiercely.
Right off the bat, I could tell that Golden was so incredibly wordy. There are huge paragraphs that basically all say the same thing, just with tons of extra words. Literally, sometimes one paragraph would describe an emotion, then the next paragraph would describe the same emotion from a slightly different angle. Don't get me wrong, the book was well written, but that overly wordy and descriptive writing style is not for me. It causes me to get antsy and start skimming, especially when the plot surrounds this big mystery. I'm just like, "Let's get to the point! I want to see the mystery unravel please!"
But if you like wordy descriptions and an almost poetic writing style, then you'll probably love it.
The romance was slightly lacking all around
In Golden we have two romance stories: the one between Parker and Trevor, and the one between Julianna and Shane/Orion. While I thought that both stories were interesting, they were both a little distant and shallow...but for very different reasons.
I considered Parker and Trevor's romance to be more of a backburner subplot. It's far from the highlight of the story. It's just there, on the side, not really involved much... which was a bummer, because it was kind of sweet!
Then there was the Julianna, Shane, and Orion love triangle. I loved this story! I totally understood why it was a love triangle, and it worked! The story itself was interesting and captivating. But I still think it was a bit distant and shallow.. why? Because although Julianna's story was basically the plot of the book, Julianna was not the main character. We just learn about her story through a journal.. So it's in the past, it's distant, it's not really right up in front. So as a result, I felt a bit detached, and it didn't dig as deeply as it could have if it was the main character's story.
But I did love the messages and the life lessons
I think one of the great things about Golden is how sometimes things fail miserably, but sometimes they do have a way of working themselves out. I loved how the book explored both angles.
Golden is really a story about finding your place in life. Or not even finding your place, but getting on track to finding your place.. just reaching that starting point. I think that's something every person in the world can relate to! It's hard to take control of your life, and it's hard to even know where you want to go in life! Golden explores both of those things in an incredibly relatable way that made it really fun to read.
Reading this book will probably make you reflect a lot on your own life, which is something I think is always so much fun to do while reading!
The mystery was predictable, but exciting
Ah, the mystery. SO PREDICTABLE! I literally guessed the entire thing right at the beginning.. and I was right. But that being said, it was still fun to read. Often times the best part isn't the ending itself, but how it unravels. Although I was pretty confident I knew how it would end, I wanted to see how it would end. I was so eager to see everything fall into place!
I am disappointed that we didn't see more of the ending though. Although we can assume that Julianna and Orion reconnected, I wanted to actually see it happen! I wanted to live in that moment with them.. but we didn't. We just hear from a third party that Orion up and left after getting a phone call, so we can easily assume that he ran off to go be with Julianna... but I wanted to watch the reunion!
Overall, the book was good but I hoped it would be better
Golden was a good book. Period. I think I just wanted it to be AMAZING and LIFE CHANGING, but for me it wasn't really either.. so the disappointment hit me twice as hard as it normally would have.
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 14 November, 2013: Finished reading
- 14 November, 2013: Reviewed