Author: Stephanie Perkins
Series: Companion books with Anna and the French Kiss and
Isla and the Happily Ever After
Genres: Young Adult, Romance, Realistic Fiction
Publisher: Dutton Books
Released: 29
September 2011
Summary courtesy of goodreads.com: Budding designer Lola
Nolan doesn’t believe in fashion . . . she believes in costume. The more
expressive the outfit -- more sparkly, more fun, more wild -- the better. But
even though Lola’s style is outrageous, she’s a devoted daughter and friend
with some big plans for the future. And everything is pretty perfect (right
down to her hot rocker boyfriend) until the dreaded Bell
twins, Calliope and Cricket, return to the neighborhood. When Cricket -- a gifted inventor -- steps
out from his twin sister’s shadow and back into Lola’s life, she must finally
reconcile a lifetime of feelings for the boy next door
For Fans Of: Sarah Dessen, Flat Out Love, Anna and the
French Kiss, and The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight
My Review: Lola, oh Lola.
How I have loved you. Lola and
the Boy Next Door is the companion novel to Anna and the French Kiss. Although many have mentioned that they like Anna
better, I have to disagree. Lola
was amazing! Although maybe I wasn’t the
biggest fan of Lola herself (although I did envy her wardrobe, and her awesome
dads! < < not a typo) I was a MASSIVE fan of one Mr. Cricket Bell.
Holy crap can anyone say SWOOOOONNNN?? Because that’s what I did people! I freaking
SWOONED. As she did with Anna and Paris, with Lola Perkins
set the stage of San Francisco
(another one of my favorite cities) perfectly. Right down to the houses that line the streets and the parks
that seem to pop up out of no where. She also
wove her characters together perfectly. The
relationships in Lola felt somehow, more real, than they did in Anna. Maybe it’s because it is Perkins' second novel
and she is dealing with more adult aged characters instead of high school
kids? Who knows, but I know that the way
Perkins voices her adults it perfect.
Especially the adults in Lola’s life. For me, Perkins has always been a
master of dialogue, seriously guys. It’s
not heady like Veronica Mars or Brick, it’s just real. The conversations that run through this book
are conversations that I have had with my parents, or with people that I
know. She is such an incredible talent
of an author.
There were a lot of points where I felt like, “this is Anna,
from St. Clair’s point of view” St. Clair and Lola are so similar personality
and life-situation wise. It was so nice
to see the story from Lola’s point of view, to see her struggle. Lola is the kind of heroine that I can really
get behind because she cares a lot about Cricket. She cares more about him than she cares about
herself. I feel like, not only is Lola
an incredibly enjoyable and practically perfect read, it is also sending out
the right message (finally!) to girls every where: That relationships are about
being there for each other and building things up together. They’re about caring more about the other
person than yourself. That’s the message
that I took away from Lola, and that is the reason that I truly love it so
much. (though her outfits and family helped a lot too) However, I DO recommend
that you read Anna and the French Kiss first (if not just so you can
squeal when characters re-appear).
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