the bride test by helen hoang

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This book is one of the cutest contemporaries I’ve read.

This book is about a half-white and half-Vietnamese girl named Esme (This is her American name) with a daughter who lives in a very small home in Vietnam with her mother and grandmother and she works as a custodian at a hotel I believe. She’s presented with an opportunity to attempt to swoon a mother’s son and get him to marry her in America and she takes that opportunity and the story takes off from there.

Now as someone who had a sibling with autism, Asperger syndrome specifically just like Khai, I am pleased and really enjoyed this book. I’m so glad that this book didn’t romanticized his condition or insult his condition. There’s so much similarities between my sister and Khai, from the keeping things orderly, being good at math, the accounting, and just having a different way of communication.

Even though is was a short book, the pacing of the book was not rushed at all but in my opinion, I think the romance was just a bit rushed in Esme’s end but I’m not complaining. I really loved Esme in this book and how she was so determined to get her green card and start a life of her own without her dad or a marriage. I loved loved loved those scene.

There were also so many scenes that were just hilarious and most of those scenes were with Khai and his brother Quan. There interactions are so funny and seeing Quan trying to explain the simple act of sex with him and referring him all the books was so funny like poor Khai but at the same time you can’t help but just go awww too.

In conclusion I really enjoyed this book. If you want a quick romance with authentic Vietnamese characters and culture then this is your book!

I rate this book five stars!

Thank you for reading!

Khai Diep has no feelings. Well, he feels irritation when people move his things or contentment when ledgers balance down to the penny, but not big, important emotions—like grief. And love. He thinks he’s defective. His family knows better—that his autism means he just processes emotions differently. When he steadfastly avoids relationships, his mother takes matters into her own hands and returns to Vietnam to find him the perfect bride.

As a mixed-race girl living in the slums of Ho Chi Minh City, Esme Tran has always felt out of place. When the opportunity arises to come to America and meet a potential husband, she can’t turn it down, thinking this could be the break her family needs. Seducing Khai, however, doesn’t go as planned. Esme’s lessons in love seem to be working…but only on herself. She’s hopelessly smitten with a man who’s convinced he can never return her affection.

With Esme’s time in the United States dwindling, Khai is forced to understand he’s been wrong all along. And there’s more than one way to love.

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stepsister by jennifer donnelly

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Usually I would put the book synopsis first in my book reviews but from now on I will just post my review first than the book synopsis afterwards since this book had a really long synopsis and I’m pretty sure you’re here more for my opinion than the synopsis (I hope!).

Anyway, I LOVED LOVED LOVED THIS BOOK!

We all know the tale of Cinderella, both Disney and Grimm version, the girl with the glass slipper, evil stepsisters, and fairy godmother.

Yeah, that story.

Except this isn’t Cinderella’s story, it’s her stepsister’s, Isabelle story and it starts right when she cuts her toes off so she can fit her foot in the glass slipper. Unfortunately, her plan fails and Cinderella actually becomes queen. You know what happens next for Cinderella.

Well, in this book takes part after Cinderella becomes queen and told in Isabelle, her stepsister point of view.

I loved Isabelle so much! She felt so real and her story was so sad because so much people were trying to bring her down and it made me so mad every time someone called her ugly and just try to break her down and I’m so glad she rose above it. This book teaches you that you are more than just a pretty face and that you can be strong and smart and brave just like any man and you can do what any man can. This book is a real feminist story I’ll tell you that.

There’s also a game between Chance and Fate, two entities that are trying to alter and control Isabelle’s. Fate has the power to create maps of people’s lives and decide when it’s time they will die and in Isabelle’s case, she was to die very soon yet there’s Chance, who tries to alter and help Isabelle detour from death. At first, I was really scared for Isabelle because I thought she was really going to have an unhappy ending. I’m sort of glad Isabelle didn’t but at the same time, I wouldn’t mind her getting a tragic ending like what would of happened if Isabelle did get her tragic ending? I’m pretty sure I’ll be an emotional wreck but the beginning just gave that foreboding dark vibe that something bad was going to happen to Isabelle.

I’m also glad their game didn’t last because it was getting old. I was so happy whenever something finally good would happen to Isabelle but there goes Fate and that stupid raven bird, trying to stop everything from going positive.

I’m SO glad the romance wasn’t really the main plot of this story and I’m SO glad that Isabelle doesn’t realize her worth and strength just from a boy. Felix was so cute and help to Isabelle and just so good to her and it was a breath of fresh sir from all of the mean people always bring Isabelle down.

To wrap up this review, I really enjoyed it and loved the message this book sent. All the characters were great and if you’re in a mood for a retelling that doesn’t involve a prince or the other cliche fairy tale then this book is for you.

I rate this book four and a half stars!

Thanks for reading!

Isabelle should be blissfully happy – she’s about to win the handsome prince. Except Isabelle isn’t the beautiful girl who lost the glass slipper and captured the prince’s heart. She’s the ugly stepsister who’s cut off her toes to fit into Cinderella’s shoe … which is now filling with blood.

When the prince discovers Isabelle’s deception, she is turned away in shame. It’s no more than she deserves: she is a plain girl in a world that values beauty; a feisty girl in a world that wants her to be pliant.

Isabelle has tried to fit in. To live up to her mother’s expectations. To be like her stepsister. To be sweet. To be pretty. One by one, she has cut away pieces of herself in order to survive a world that doesn’t appreciate a girl like her. And that has made her mean, jealous, and hollow.

Until she gets a chance to alter her destiny and prove what ugly stepsisters have always known: it takes more than heartache to break a girl.

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eliza and her monsters by francesca zappia #relatable

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Her story is a phenomenon. Her life is a disaster.

In the real world, Eliza Mirk is shy, weird, and friendless. Online, she’s LadyConstellation, the anonymous creator of the wildly popular webcomic Monstrous Sea. Eliza can’t imagine enjoying the real world as much as she loves the online one, and she has no desire to try.

Then Wallace Warland, Monstrous Sea’s biggest fanfiction writer, transfers to her school. Wallace thinks Eliza is just another fan, and as he draws her out of her shell, she begins to wonder if a life offline might be worthwhile.

But when Eliza’s secret is accidentally shared with the world, everything she’s built—her story, her relationship with Wallace, and even her sanity—begins to fall apart.

I love this book so much.

This story in a way saved my life.

Here’s a quick gist of the book is about in case you were too lazy to read the synopsis. This book is about a girl name Eliza who is a webcomic creator to this popular series called Monstrous Sea but no one know’s she’s the author since she displays herself anonymous. She meets a guy from school named Wallace who’s a fan of Monstrous Sea and then stuff happens!

I will say this again.

I love this book.

Although the cover is cute, it is not your cute quick contemporary reads. This book is actually pretty dark and involves mental issues such as anxiety, depression, and suicide.

What makes me really love the book is how much I can relate to characters. If I were to name this review, I would name it #relatable because everything about Eliza is just so dang relatable.

Raise your hand if you’ve been personally victimized by parents who just don’t understand you.

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Raise your hand if you’re socially awkward

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Raise your hand if you get anxiety being in a public setting

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Raise your hand if you’re just a nerd who rather spend time in their room on the internet than go out in the real world and socialize

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If you raised your hand to all of this, then you’re an Eliza as well.

Most of my reviews are more discussions than actually reviewing the book but as a reviewer I have no major issues in the book I really want to talk about. Like I said I loved it and all I want to do is hold the book and forever because it was just so #relatable!

And not only with Eliza but Wallace too. He comes from a home where his stepfather doesn’t believe in writing as a real career. I understood Wallace’s frustration towards his stepfather and how can you live life without doing the things you’re passionate about?

“What’s the point of being alive if you don’t do what makes you happy? What good is a career that makes you money if you hate yourself every day you do it? I don’t have a family to support. I don’t have bills to pay, at least not right now. Sure, I’ll have to pay student loans, but we only have enough money for me to go to community college anyway, so I’ll pay it of with whatever job to get after that. I don’t need to be a doctor, or a lawyer, or whatever important job he wants me to get. I just want to write.”

Eliza and Her Monsters

#relatable

I think Wallace and Eliza are cute together! I like that even though they got together, they were still friends. Usually I get kind of bored after the two love interests get together and start being all couple-y but not Eliza and Wallace and their moments were just too adorable!

I also like how Eliza starts being close with her brothers after her identity has been found out and Eliza starts realizing her family are actual people with actual lives and she starts to take notice the smallest things they do.

Sully rolls his eyes. Mom and Dad are too old to get it. They didn’t even have cells phone when they were younger. Maybe Googling it wouldn’t have helped them.” He rubs his nose. Anyway, if you need to, like, talk to someone, you know where to find me and Church.”

“That’s-that would be nice, actually.” My voice is small, but Sully’s expression opens up. After a moment’s hesitation, he slips into the room, shuts the door behind him, and sits with his legs curled up on the opposite end of my bed. “Thanks,” I say. Sully smiles at me for the first time I can remember.

Eliza and Her Monsters

There’s just so much messages in this book that I wish I had a better way of telling. If I were to give someone a book about me, I would honestly hand over this book because it just gets me, you know. The anxiety, the parents not understanding you, the parents that have their opinions on your future, and enjoying the internet.

This books means so much to me in every way and taught me so much that I’m going to use towards real life. All I want to do is hug this book really.

I recommend this book to nerdy and geeky people like myself who rather sit in their room all day on the internet. I rate this five out of five stars!
Thanks for reading!

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the sun is also a star movie review and RANT

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On the day May 22, 2019, I went to the movies during the afternoon and watched The Sun is also a Star. Since none of the people in my life know the importance of this movie to me since I read the book, no one was interested in seeing the movie with me (not even my mom who was a book geek like me but she likes fantasy more). So I went to the movies by myself and even had the whole theater to myself. In all, I enjoyed the movie. It was cute and a little funny sometimes and if you’re willing to ignore the missing stuff from the book in the movie, it’s basically another cute contemporary movie about love and finding it in the unexpected places.

Hope you don’t mind some minor spoilers and this very long post.

Although the movie didn’t stick entirely to the book like Daniel’s long hair, his red tie, the back story of the side characters, and even the ending, I still enjoyed it. I watched interviews of Charles Melton and Yara Shadihi, the two main characters that play Natasha and Daniel, and they’re so adorable!

Also did you guys know Daniel is 28? He looks so young! I swear those Asian genes are something else!

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If someone didn’t read the book, they would see it as another romantic teen movie but as a reader and someone who read the book, I can see why people didn’t enjoy it and I’ll start why.

Aside from the minor stuff like Daniel’s hair and tie…

WHERE WERE THE SIDE CHARACTERS IN THE MOVIE?

WHERE WAS IRENE STORY? WHERE WAS NATASHA’S DAD STORY? WHERE WAS THE GUY FROM THE IMMIGRATION OFFICE GUY STORY?

AND THAT ENDING?!

The part that bugged the most was not having the side character’s story! Especially Irene’s! The point of their stories in the books is to show how our actions can have an affect on someone’s lives, even if it’s the smallest thing, it can cause a shift. That’s the point of Irene story and how Natasha examining her phone at the security place a little longer than usual is the reason how she met Daniel! Natasha’s simple “thank you” to Irene saved her life! And even that immigration guy that was supposed to be Natasha’s last hope stupid decision to miss the thing with the judge because of his adulterous decisions!

They didn’t even show Natasha’s dad background story and I’m not even sure they even stated why they’re being deported. They barely even show that big argument between Natasha and her dad.

It’s those things that makes the story real in the book and that’s why it would seem like another cheesy teen romance movie to someone with no knowledge of the book.

SERIOUSLY NO IRENE!?!?!

IRENE IS THE REASON DANIEL AND NATASHA MET!

SHE’S THE ONE THAT SET IT OFF! WORD TO LIL BOOSIE!

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Like how can you not put that in the movie? I simply do not get it. Maybe Irene attempting suicide could be triggering and looks dark to the audience but if people can read it on the book then I’m pretty sure it’s no problem looking at it on film.

This film could’ve been so much more if they would just add the small stuff that made the book so good. Really those small things like Irene, Natasha’s father, and even the waitress at the Korean restaurant is what made the story.

This is one of the reason why I strongly dislike book-to-movie adaptions. When you read the book, you know everyone’s thoughts and feelings. So as a reader, when you watch the movie, you know what the character’s are thinking and experiencing but for someone who didn’t read the book, they wouldn’t understand and watching as a movie critic. It’s just another cheesy love story when the reader in me knows it’s really not.

I really loved the book and I wish they would just stick to the words on the pages but who knows maybe they didn’t have the budget but aside from my frustrations, I enjoyed the movie.

I love the scene where Daniel takes Natasha to his family beauty supply shop and seeing all the haircare products made me so happy. If you didn’t know I’m a black girl with big curly hair and seeing all the natural hair brands made me so happy. Also the argument between Daniel and his brother was hilarious. Also even though the museum part in the movie wasn’t in the book, I think that scene was pretty cute.

The movie wasn’t entirely horrible, like I said it was another cheesy teen romance. If I were to rate the movie, it would be three and a half stars.

Thanks for reading!