Nora’s sister Libby insists on taking her on a monthlong vacation to Sunshine Falls, a rustic town where Nora can find her own love story with a rough-and-tumble local (preferably a lumberjack). The story follows Nora, a New York literary agent nicknamed “The Shark” who keeps losing boyfriends to cute new fiancées found in charming small towns. "Book Lovers" is a treat from start to finish, flipping the conventional small-town love story trope on its head. More: A tangled story about a wedding guest who falls for the groom tops April's must-read rom-comsīy Emily Henry. But McQuiston’s twists on the trope, including setting complex queer characters in a conservative southern town, is an endlessly inventive, mysterious, messy joy of a journey to self-discovery. – Hannah Yashoroff The premise is undoubtedly John Green-esque, right down to the disappearing teenage manic pixie dream girl. When Chloe learns she isn’t the only one Shara kissed, she must work with the others to solve a series of clues left behind to bring the town sweetheart back. McQuiston has done it again. The USA TODAY bestselling author of “Red, White & Royal Blue” and “One Last Stop” delivers a YA novel with a swoon-worthy romance readers have come to expect from their first two triumphant works.Ĭhloe Green’s senior year gets rocked when her nemesis, prom queen and would-be valedictorian opponent Shara Wheeler, kisses her and then flees their small Alabama town.
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