![]() ![]() Whenever I had to stop reading the book, I’d think about it while I was gone because I just had to know what happened next. ![]() Plus, the story is varied with multiple subplots at all times. (If you count fictional girls as company, then I was having a girls’ night in.) It draws you in with the realness and voyeuristic charm that comes with reading other people’s messages… minus the guilt of violating someone’s privacy. Reading this book almost made me feel like I was having a girls’ night in. Although this book is fiction, the text is authentic and alive, so the story is believable. It’s obvious that Dunn and Raskin are both comedians, writers, YouTubers, and filmmakers. Despite their different situations and the distance between them, the two remain close. Meanwhile, Gen moves to Florida and works as a journalist, but mostly hates living in Florida. Ava moves to New York to do an internship for a popular talk show. In these digital exchanges, these women in their early twenties describe their daily happenings as they both begin new chapters of their lives. The narrative focuses on emails and text messages written by Ava and Gen. The book isn’t divided into chapters, but it’s still easy to read. I Hate Everyone But You got published in 2017, so it’s the big reveal people have been waiting for. ![]() Now, the world can finally find out what actually happens to Ava and Gen, the protagonists of the series. Since then, it’s been taking the YA novel scene by storm. On July 16th in 2019, Wednesday Books published Please Send Help. ![]()
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