Zan Romanoff
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5 verk 183 medlemmar 10 recensioner
Verk av Zan Romanoff
Grace and the Fever 22 exemplar
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Fans--Fiction. Friends--Fiction. Middle schools--Fiction. Fever Dream fans--Fiction. High schools--Fiction. High school graduations--Fiction. Grace Thomas (Fictitious character). Online groups--Fiction. Obsessions--Fiction. Idols--Fiction. Jes (Fictitious (1)
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Medlemmar
Recensioner
Flaggad
emmy_of_spines | 2 andra recensioner | Sep 8, 2022 | I really enjoyed this one. The teenagers actually felt like real teenagers and I loved the added layer of feminism. And of course really appreciated the LBGTQ representation.
Flaggad
DominiqueDavis | 2 andra recensioner | Aug 9, 2022 | Grades:9-12
Characterization: Very good
Literary Merit: Very good
Recommended
Lulu loved posting photos and videos of herself on Flash, a Snapchat-like social media network that is all the rage with her friends and the other the private school kids of Los Angeles. That is until she accidentally posted a video that led to a breakup with boyfriend Owen and strained relationships in her group of friends. Lulu still posts to Flash without really addressing the incident, not wanting to let her 5000 followers know that there might be trouble in paradise. Then Lulu meets Cass, an intriguing girl who doesn’t use social media and doesn’t appear to give much thought to her appearance. Cass takes Lulu to The Hotel, the passion project of her friend Ryan whose uber-wealthy family includes the creator of Flash. The Hotel feels like a sanctuary where Lulu can just be herself and not worry about maintaining her online persona, but eventually, The Hotel’s renovation is completed and the problems of the outside world intrude.
I liked this book a lot more than I expected to. At first, it seemed that Lulu would be the stereotypical spoiled, rich girl. While there are some aspects of Lulu’s personality that fit with that, Romanoff has created a three-dimensional character who is likable despite her flaws. I found myself rooting for her and wanting her to come into her own.
Romanoff addresses some well-trod themes dealing with the dangers of social media, but she does it in a way that felt fresh possibly because the “big mistake” happens months before the action of the book begins. Lulu is grappling with how to move on from that and who she wants to become while also figuring out how to define her sexuality.
Recommended for teen collections where contemporary YA is popular. Parents are largely absent and teen drinking and marijuana use occur throughout the novel.… (mer)
Characterization: Very good
Literary Merit: Very good
Recommended
Lulu loved posting photos and videos of herself on Flash, a Snapchat-like social media network that is all the rage with her friends and the other the private school kids of Los Angeles. That is until she accidentally posted a video that led to a breakup with boyfriend Owen and strained relationships in her group of friends. Lulu still posts to Flash without really addressing the incident, not wanting to let her 5000 followers know that there might be trouble in paradise. Then Lulu meets Cass, an intriguing girl who doesn’t use social media and doesn’t appear to give much thought to her appearance. Cass takes Lulu to The Hotel, the passion project of her friend Ryan whose uber-wealthy family includes the creator of Flash. The Hotel feels like a sanctuary where Lulu can just be herself and not worry about maintaining her online persona, but eventually, The Hotel’s renovation is completed and the problems of the outside world intrude.
I liked this book a lot more than I expected to. At first, it seemed that Lulu would be the stereotypical spoiled, rich girl. While there are some aspects of Lulu’s personality that fit with that, Romanoff has created a three-dimensional character who is likable despite her flaws. I found myself rooting for her and wanting her to come into her own.
Romanoff addresses some well-trod themes dealing with the dangers of social media, but she does it in a way that felt fresh possibly because the “big mistake” happens months before the action of the book begins. Lulu is grappling with how to move on from that and who she wants to become while also figuring out how to define her sexuality.
Recommended for teen collections where contemporary YA is popular. Parents are largely absent and teen drinking and marijuana use occur throughout the novel.… (mer)
Flaggad
SWONroyal | 2 andra recensioner | Sep 24, 2020 | I didn't really expect to like this book. I've never been into boybands, or pop music in general. If I have an opinion on groups like One Direction, it's that their music is ok but generic and the members are kind of obnoxious.
But Grace and the Fever surprised me. The book could have gone down some pretty cliche routes, or been heavy-handed in its message. Instead, Romanoff presents a group of characters who are complex, messed up, and caught up in relationships and entanglements that aren't necessarily healthy, and are acknowledged as such. I thought this was going to be a book about a girl that falls in love with a member of her favorite boyband. Instead, it's about a girl who gets caught in the sphere of that boyband, and how massively effed up that sphere is.
Also, the the accuracy of Romanoff's portrayal of Tumblr is terrifying. Almost as terrifying as Tumblr when it gets really obsessive (which is frequently).… (mer)
But Grace and the Fever surprised me. The book could have gone down some pretty cliche routes, or been heavy-handed in its message. Instead, Romanoff presents a group of characters who are complex, messed up, and caught up in relationships and entanglements that aren't necessarily healthy, and are acknowledged as such. I thought this was going to be a book about a girl that falls in love with a member of her favorite boyband. Instead, it's about a girl who gets caught in the sphere of that boyband, and how massively effed up that sphere is.
Also, the the accuracy of Romanoff's portrayal of Tumblr is terrifying. Almost as terrifying as Tumblr when it gets really obsessive (which is frequently).… (mer)
Flaggad
miri12 | 1 annan recension | May 31, 2019 | Listor
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Statistik
- Verk
- 5
- Medlemmar
- 183
- Popularitet
- #118,259
- Betyg
- 3.8
- Recensioner
- 10
- ISBN
- 11
It's essentially about snapchat, which is something that I didn't grow up with and that (as a 31 year old) I don't use regularly, so in some ways it felt very interesting to imagine my own adolescent life with the influence of that kind of social media, since there were other aspects of the main character's story that felt very true to my own. I also always relish a good overtly feminist bent, and with complex friendship navigation plotlines. Would definitely recommend picking this up. It's so much more than it seems at first glance.
Mentioned in a blog post at https://booksbeyondbinaries.blog/2020/01/06/how-i-learned-i-love-thrillers/… (mer)