We'll Always Have Summer, by Jenny Han

We'll Always Have Summer, by Jenny Han, is the third and last one of the trilogy! This book i enjoyed because it basically skimmed through time and now Belly is in college and when she finds out that Jeremiah (Conrad's brother and Belly's boyfriend) had cheated on her she get furious and leaves him but he comes back with an unexpected surprise! Out of the blue he proposed to her! Since she's still in college and still a teen everyone begins confronting her and doubting her choice... On the day of the wedding she backs out because she had thought to herself,"What would Susannah say?" and after she had made her choice she had waited for years until her beloved came and swooped her off her feet at the rightest time! Can you guess who it might be?

 This book really opened my eyes to the true yet harsh reality that you can't really truly trust someone and that you always have to think before you make a difficult decision. I'm glad I read this because it truly taught me to not let distractions get the best of me and my education. I really recommend this to all teens who struggle through life that involves love! 

Reviewed by Alina O., grade 9
Montrose Library

Comments

Melissa said…
Belly has only ever loved two boys in her life, Conrad and Jeremiah Fisher. One broke her heart and went on to college; the other made her happier than she ever thought she'd be for a period of time. However, each brother is keeping a major secret, and this summer Belly must choose between the Fisher boys, once and for all, but it will cost her and make her question who the boys really are.

This book was a huge disappointment in the series. It absolutely despises the fact she tries to make Jeremah and Belly get married at such a young age and in a way allows Belly to make in a rebellion kind of way. There was also no communication between the characters and characteristics of each character had been modified the worst. Decisions that they made in this book would have never actually been made if it were the original characters' personalities. She made Jeremiah, one of the leads, a horrible character and made him into a lying character when he was also the friend that was open and honest. This book disappointed me more than any book has ever and I would not recommend it to anyone.

Reviewed by Ariana G., Grade 11
Montrose Library

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