I was really looking forward to this book, and in a lot of ways it delivered. I was blown away by The Fault in Our Stars because it captured so much of the heartache I felt having a child who had cancer. I cried through about the last third of the book, and wished that I had had it to give to people while my son was getting chemotherapy and radiation. "Here is something to help you understand where I am at right now." So it would have been almost impossible for this book to have a greater impact on me.
And it didn't. But I did very much enjoy this tale of a young woman who has significant anxieties, obsessions, and ruminations. She is getting help, taking medications, and yet, despite all that, it is hard for her to have a semblance of a normal young adulthood. Green is best when he is exploring those who live on the edges during teenhood, and Ava is a great character. The story he builds around her is less compelling and more what you would expect from a YA novel, but in many ways, he couldn't really top he last book in my estimation, and I was happy with this one.
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