Review by Booklist Review
Luke and Phoebe went to high school together, but they didn't know each other. Well, soccer stud Luke didn't know girl-next-door Phoebe, though now that they're at the same university and he's broken up with his girlfriend back home, he's starting to notice her. Phoebe, though, definitely knew Luke she's had a crush on him forever. And now that they're at York together, she finally has the chance to be the kind of girl he might be into. But drama is never far away during freshman year some of the boys on Luke's soccer team are exhibiting some very shady behavior and there's a lot that could get in the way of a budding hookup . . . or even a relationship. In their second collaboration (A Totally Awkward Love Story, 2016), British duo Ellen and Ivison absolutely nail teen dialogue, taking readers on a laugh-out-loud-funny journey through the ups and sometimes horrifying downs of freshman year. Flirty, bawdy, sloppy, and buckets of fun this is quite the college experience.--Maggie Reagan Copyright 2018 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Ellen and Ivison (A Totally Awkward Love Story) have teamed up again, this time with a U.K.-based college romance reminiscent of the TV show Felicity. On the first night of freshman orientation, Phoebe runs into her high-school crush, Luke, who, that same night, breaks up with his high-school girlfriend, Abbey. Missed connections and almost-dates ensue between Luke and Phoebe, but their fireworks eventually burn fast and fierce, even though Luke is still off-and-on with Abbey. This story captures the central experiences of starting college-forming new friendships, making mistakes big and small, and riding out relationship dramas, from hookups to breakups. Luke and Phoebe are flawed and human: they try to be good friends to others but sometimes fall short; they long for love but mess things up along the way. Meanwhile, they live it up in college, joining the Quidditch team, and dancing and partying as much as possible. Luke's ongoing dramas with Abbey make him the more frustrating character, leaving readers to fall harder for Phoebe in this entertaining novel about the first year of college. Ages 14-up. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Review by Horn Book Review
At a UK college's orientation, eighteen-year-old Phoebe befriends her high-school crush, Luke, and the two begin a relationship defined by missed connections and metaphorical ghosts from the past. It's a heartfelt, entertaining rom-com, with Luke's and Phoebe's alternating points of view providing authentic freshman-year perspectives about struggling to fit in, balancing school with social lives, and living away from home. (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
The first term at university is a time for making new friends, falling in love, attending parties, playing quidditch, shedding old relationships, and maybe even attending a lecture or two.Luke and Phoebe were at school together before arriving in York; while Phoebe has had a crush on Luke for ages, he's barely been aware of her existence. Luke and his longtime girlfriend are now separated, both by the miles and his confused feelings. Phoebe, meanwhile, cannot believe her luck as circumstances repeatedly throw them together, making her adolescent dream of a relationship with dishy Luke a real possibility. But the waters are muddied when Luke joins the soccer team: He's uncomfortable with the misogynistic group texts that are deeply embedded in the team culturebut not enough to risk his standing with posh captain Will by doing anything about it. As the students and their respective social circles get to know one another, they learn that part of growing up is embracing even the gloriously messy, uncomfortable parts of life. While the Americanization of some vocabulary is jarring in this oh-so-English novel, it is marked by a refreshing absence of mean girl drama, well-rounded and caring boy characters, fluid writing, expert pacing, and genuine humor. Main characters, other than Phoebe's Iranian-British friend, are assumed white, with ethnic diversity in background characters.Full of heart, this is David Nicholls' One Day for teens. (Fiction. 14-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.