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Post by Dabeagle on Nov 13, 2022 14:37:48 GMT -5
I"d read What If It's Us and had enjoyed it, right up until the letdown that the main characters didn't stay together. IN the sequel we find our two main characters being reunited - but they are both dating other people. Well Arthur is, but Ben is sort-of dating. Lots of feelings being thrown around, best friend drama galore and some feelings that aren't dead. This book accomplishes some things I don't like to do in writing, which is breaking some characters - and readers' - hearts. You feel for Mikey, who loves Arthur. You feel for Mario, who cares so much for Ben. And yet life is complicated and you have to work for what you want. While I was disappointed at a lack of HEA in the first book, some of the messiness left me sad for some characters in the sequel. It is, however, an undeniably good read.
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Post by PaulR5 on Nov 13, 2022 14:43:24 GMT -5
HEA -- Acronym for "Happily Ever After"?
I really doubt that it's one which scored higher on acronymfinder dot com -- "High Energy Astrophysics."
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Post by Dabeagle on Nov 13, 2022 14:45:57 GMT -5
Haha, yes, happily ever after.
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Post by dgt224 on Nov 15, 2022 1:02:12 GMT -5
HEA -- Acronym for "Happily Ever After"? I really doubt that it's one which scored higher on acronymfinder dot com -- "High Energy Astrophysics." Given the context (and Dabeagle's reply), I'm sure you're right. Still, I can't recall ever reading a story involving high-energy astrophysics that disappointed, so it may be good that the ambiguity has been resolved. Also, I'd never heard of acronymfinder dot com - this forum is a wellspring of useful information!
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Post by PaulR5 on Nov 15, 2022 1:27:53 GMT -5
HEA -- Acronym for "Happily Ever After"? I really doubt that it's one which scored higher on acronymfinder dot com -- "High Energy Astrophysics." Given the context (and Dabeagle's reply), I'm sure you're right. Still, I can't recall ever reading a story involving high-energy astrophysics that disappointed, so it may be good that the ambiguity has been resolved. Also, I'd never heard of acronymfinder dot com - this forum is a wellspring of useful information! The two I use most often are acronymfinder dot com and acronymlist dot com. Once in a while you can also find an acronym on urbandictionary dot com, but that is a bit iffy.
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