Before I jump onto this book review, let me ask you a question. Do you keep new year reading resolutions? If yes, what’s your reading resolution for this new year?
Now, I’m not one to keep any sorts of resolutions for new year’s, let alone a reading one, because I know I won’t be able to keep up with everything I want to ideally do in my life within just a year. But this year, I’ve made some resolutions, and yes, even reading resolutions.
So, here’s two of them: One, I will read as many books as possible. So far, so good. Two, I’ll DNF books that are not worth getting finished.
I’ve noticed that I have this very weird habit of dragging and forcing myself to finish books that I don’t want to finish because they’re not worth it, just so I can say that I’ve read another book and be one book closer to reaching my Goodreads reading challenge of the year…which, spoiler alert, I never win, anyway.
It got me thinking that if I focus on books that I actually wanna finish because they are just THAT GOOD, I would actually pace myself through it and finish it in time, which will give me sufficient time to read another book that I would actually want to finish. And that made me decide that if I don’t find a book interesting even after reaching 70% mark, then it’s to mark it DNF and move on.
And that’s what I did with this book. I DNF’d it.
Why? Let’s see.
Ready for it is about friendship feud and blood gone bad, as Taylor Swift likes to call it. It’s about two best friends, Natalie and Fiona. Natalie who has her work life together and Fiona whose love life is all set to go. The grass is always greener on the other side, and so, the two besties are almost on the verge of throwing themselves at any opportunity that gives them the luck to live the other ones life for a moment. It all starts with Fiona moving out of her apartment with Natalie so she can finally live-in with her high school sweetheart which pushes Natalie to look for either another flatmate or a new job opportunity just so she can pay the rent on time. When she finds out about the new job offer, turns out she’s not the only one who is applying for it, but her very own best friend Fiona is too.
Now, let me start by telling you that I absolutely love the friends-to-enemies trope (and the reverse) because this trope is so realistic. True love has nothing on forever friendships for being hard to find, especially nowadays in the world of leaving people on read, and stood up and sending memes to each other to stay in touch instead of actually talking to them. Friendships are honestly just as fictional as fictional men today, honest. So, when I saw that this book is about the struggles of friendship, I was like yes, sign me up.
The book starts out good. It was really, really good in the beginning. Fiona was just moving out and Natalie was wondering how she’ll ever pay the rent. The tension was there and the stakes were high. Then a job opportunity comes up. The two besties apply for the same role. One of them gets it, one of them doesn’t. I was loving the tension and the underlying internal struggle that was threatening to burst and hurt their friendship. BUT THEN. A fight happened, which I had expected but what I had not expected was for it to get resolved so quickly.
And then, it didn’t just resolve very quickly, something else happened (which I won’t spoil) that was totally unnecessary and didn’t support the storyline or advance the plot in anyway whatsoever, and that was it. I was done with the book at 80% because the tension was gone, the stakes had gone crickets and the fights just did not make any sense anymore, and they weren’t even funny either. So, I gave up.
I just personally feel that if that thing that I don’t want to spoil had not have happened, the book would have been much better and I would have actually finished it. It was like the author kind of derailed from the original plot and started writing something else entirely.
Also, the characters were not carved out properly. They felt like cardboard cliches and two dimensional. Many a times when the point of view was switched from one pov to the other, I wouldn’t even realize it because the two sounded so similar. The characters would have sounded better if they had distinct character voice, given their situations and different mentality.
All in all I would like to give this book a 2.5 out of 5 stars. The original plot was good and the writing was great too but the poorly written characters and the lack of tension later in the book ruined the book for me.
I would also like to thank Netgalley, the author and the publishers who gave me the opportunity to read this book in return for an honest opinion.