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A review by rosiereviewsreads
Icebreaker by A.L. Graziadei
emotional
funny
hopeful
inspiring
lighthearted
reflective
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
5.0
I’m going to have to edit this review when I finally wrap my head around just now good this book was.
It has me crying, full on sobbing, it had me laughing, it had me double check MY mental health just to make sure I’m doing okay.
Graziadei knows how to write a book, how to tell a story and how to make a character seem real. The first POV puts you there and you feel every emotion Mickey does.
The book is so fast paced (I finished it in 7 hours, including the time I actually had to work) and the ending left me wanting more (I screamed “wtf” at the ending)
It’s such a pure enemies to loves story, a young love that warms your heart. (just a bit too young for my liking. The character start at age 17 and I don’t think I’ve met a single college freshman that didn’t skip a year that’s 17 but the characters do age up before anything happens)
It had such a diverse range of characters, race, LGBT+, mental health, you know it and it’s probably there. It also addresses how expectations can change a family dynamic, and how sometimes found family can help fix “real” family.
I’m excited to reread this book and annotate it, probably the first book I will every annotate.
It has me crying, full on sobbing, it had me laughing, it had me double check MY mental health just to make sure I’m doing okay.
Graziadei knows how to write a book, how to tell a story and how to make a character seem real. The first POV puts you there and you feel every emotion Mickey does.
The book is so fast paced (I finished it in 7 hours, including the time I actually had to work) and the ending left me wanting more (I screamed “wtf” at the ending)
It’s such a pure enemies to loves story, a young love that warms your heart. (just a bit too young for my liking. The character start at age 17 and I don’t think I’ve met a single college freshman that didn’t skip a year that’s 17 but the characters do age up before anything happens)
It had such a diverse range of characters, race, LGBT+, mental health, you know it and it’s probably there. It also addresses how expectations can change a family dynamic, and how sometimes found family can help fix “real” family.
I’m excited to reread this book and annotate it, probably the first book I will every annotate.