The poetry presented in this volume personifies very personal and intimate moments that have impacted the author's life. The book features raw, blunt, and in your face poems depicting the darker side of relationships. Readers will find themes such as lies, cheating, and heartache abundant in much of this collection. Midnight Milkshakes, being the second volume of Ray's Ice Cream And Suicide, is great for returning readers to the series. The book focuses on much of the same style and mood that is common in his writings.
I feel like this one was kind of... worse than the first one. The first one definitely had some poems that struck a chord. This one though, it really seemed like the same thing was being said as the first, with a few changes in wording. 2/5 Stars - Not the greatest, but still a decent book.
Er...it is not that good, it's not exceptional, it has nothing special. The first book wasn't excepcional neither, but it had potencial. But this is definitely a downgrade. The poems are basic and kind of boring. It had zero power. And it was very difficult to connect with their words.
The collection tried to capture nostalgia, late-night longing, and the bittersweet taste of youth, but it never entirely stuck the landing. The themes were there—love, loss, fleeting moments of connection—but they felt like echoes of something deeper, never fully explored. It read like a diary left open on a café table, full of emotions but lacking the kind of weight that makes poetry linger in the mind.
The setting wove itself between neon-lit diners, empty streets, and quiet moments beneath the stars, which should have given the poems a dreamy, melancholic charm. Instead, it all felt like an aesthetic rather than something genuinely lived-in. The imagery was pretty, but it didn’t dig beneath the surface—it painted a mood but didn’t bring it to life.
As for the writing, it leaned heavily on simplicity, which isn’t a flaw in itself, but here, it often felt more like a collection of half-formed thoughts than carefully crafted poetry. Some lines had potential, but many read like captions pulled from social media, more concerned with being relatable than being resonant. There were glimpses of something more—lines that hinted at deeper emotions—but they were buried beneath clichés and predictable phrasing.
It was easy to read, easy to digest, and, unfortunately, easy to forget. There was heart in these pages, but not enough depth to make it last.
If downgrading was a book, this would be it. Being part of the cheating is also one kind of cheating. Just because they left you too, doesn't justify that you were helping the other party to cheat in the first place. I can't feel sorry knowing that. Also, these are the same things, repeated over and over again just with a different title and different set of words.
She cheated on her husband with you. You were a part of it. You thought you were special. You had fun. She left you too. The end. That's the summary of this book.
I loved every pieces of this book. Majority of these poems hit me right in the heart. It was like Ray writes the thinhs we feel tjat we ourselves cannot say. Ive been this heart broken, I've been this in love, I've been this rejected and Ive been the convenient choice between the other having two lovers. I know what it feel like to be second best and Ray does a perfect job of portraying the agony of what it feels like. I loved this collection.
This was the second collection in the poetry series by this author looking at one sided love when one person pulls away, leaving you questioning and guessing what changed and why when you gave them everything and they destroy your feelings anyway.
A deep feeling collection showing all the emotions love and a breakup cause.
I have to say I am a new fan of the author. I read Vol. I and was completely captivated by his writing. This one did the exact same thing. I have so many highlights throughout this book. You can feel the pain and the betrayal. I could not put it down.
Big Dipper Chocolate And Strawberry Please Big Hearts // Slave Away Untitled VIII Cinderella Untitled IX No Such Thing As “Wrong Timing” Are You Okay? Ever Be Friends Again? Blueberry Muffins
This book.was.beautifully written. This book painted so many pictures of so.many different emotions. My only hope.is that I can one day find more raw and honest poetry like this.
Just like vol. 1 (Ice Cream & Suicide), I wasn't impressed much at all with Jack Ray's poetry. Yet, there was a small handful of poems/single lines that were thought-provoking and brilliant enough to not make me fully regret reading this book.
2.75. really not the best poetry, in my opinion, but there are a few hidden gems in there. I will say it's not my favorite when books paint the ex as the worst person ever, but then again, I don't know his ex
“You were so thankful to have me in your life. You struggled to imagine a day going by without me. But somehow, someway you were still the one to get rid of me.”
This world without you It seems so meaningless Eyes frosted with bloodied tears Blinds me from moving on Seeing only this moment Forever living this life without you.
It’s called Everlong…
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I am very impressed with this poetry just with how damn deep and emotionally damaging it is. You can clearly sense the author’s pain through his words all throughout this book.
“You were so thankful to have me in your life. You struggled to imagine a day going by without me. But somehow, someway you were still the one to get rid of me.”