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A review by mikathereviewer
A Gentle Reminder by Bianca Sparacino
slow-paced
1.0
I wouldn't recommend this book to anyone, unless they need constantly a reminder.
All the words repeat itself so often and the topics too. It's all about 'you deserve love', 'you should move on' and 'focus on this and that'.
The WHOLE book is about romance and heartbreak and how to deal with it, reminding you that you are worth of love and just didn't find the right person.
As someone who isn't heartbroken I definitely didn't need it, but that's not my problem. My problem is just like what I said above; Repetition. It repeats the same 3-4 things again and again. The book could have been way shorter! And anapher is used way too often, meaning sentences start with the same word. Sometimes you get up to 5 pages full of only the same sentence starting word. It's tiresome.
Also, there are cringy moments like using 'your demons' and being so incompetent and providing false information by saying that the tongue is the strongest muscle in your body. It's a common misconception, which I don't get. It's by the way the chewing muscle at the back of your jaw, called masseter.
All the words repeat itself so often and the topics too. It's all about 'you deserve love', 'you should move on' and 'focus on this and that'.
The WHOLE book is about romance and heartbreak and how to deal with it, reminding you that you are worth of love and just didn't find the right person.
As someone who isn't heartbroken I definitely didn't need it, but that's not my problem. My problem is just like what I said above; Repetition. It repeats the same 3-4 things again and again. The book could have been way shorter! And anapher is used way too often, meaning sentences start with the same word. Sometimes you get up to 5 pages full of only the same sentence starting word. It's tiresome.
Also, there are cringy moments like using 'your demons' and being so incompetent and providing false information by saying that the tongue is the strongest muscle in your body. It's a common misconception, which I don't get. It's by the way the chewing muscle at the back of your jaw, called masseter.