Call number
Series
Genres
Collection
Publication
Description
Seventeen-year-old Molly Peskin-Suso knows all about unrequited love. No matter how many times her twin sister, Cassie, tells her to woman up, Molly can't stomach the idea of rejection. So she's careful. Fat girls always have to be careful. Then a cute new girl enters Cassie's orbit, and for the first time ever, Molly's cynical twin is a lovesick mess. Meanwhile, Molly's totally not dying of loneliness -- except for the part where she is. Luckily, Cassie's new girlfriend comes with a cute hipster-boy sidekick. If Molly can win him over, she'll get her first kiss and she'll get her twin back. There's only one problem: Molly's coworker, Reid. He's a chubby Tolkien superfan with a season pass to the Ren Faire, and there's absolutely no way Molly could fall for him. Right?… (more)
User reviews
The problem I had while reading this book is that there are too many characters but not enough character building. Even Molly's character confused me, she often contradicts herself. In the author's note she admits she had difficulty writing this book, and I felt that while reading it. The story arc isn't clearly defined and it seemed to me that the story just went on and on until it could find a nice enough exit. I also found the conflict a bit shallow - teenagers wanting to have boyfriends/girlfriends, and their fascination with losing their virginity. I would like to read a book where teenagers aren't so focused on sex and booze for a change, something that wouldn't worry me if my daughter reads it.
That being said, this book also has some good points. It touches on issues like the diversity of modern day families, the bond of sisterhood, the importance of good friends, falling in love for the first time and learning to love yourself. I like it that Molly's weight isn't the main focus of this book, rather, it is about the ebbs and flows of relationships. I also like it that the author doesn't shy away from issues that the LGBTQ community faces. Molly has a twin, Cassie, and I appreciate the fact that, although they do get in each other's nerves, there is no good twin vs. evil twin angle.
I give this book 3.5 out of 5 stars.
This YA romance is super cute on a lot of levels. Molly is sweet and her feelings of being left out of the knowledge of how you go from liking someone to telling them you like them is pretty relatable. The book should also get an awesome award for its fantastic representation of LGBTQ characters. Fans of Stephanie Perkins and Jennifer E. Smith should definitely give this one a whirl.
i have honestly never related
i was not sure what the unrequited love would be, but then towards the end a thing happened and i cried so hard and then it all turned out well and that made me cry even more and i don't think any contemporary has ever made me feel so many things so intensely. and the relationship. oh god. THAT WAS THE MOST ADORABLE SH*T. I DON'T THINK I'VE EVER ROOTED FOR A RELATIONSHIP AS MUCH AS I HAVE FOR THIS. AND THEN WHEN IT HAPPENED. i think i didn't stop crying from the 25th chapter onwards.
this book deserves all the hype, and more, and is so important, and incredible, and emotional, and realistic, and full of representation, and i will not rest until everyone has read it. this is probably the best book i've read this year. and there were cameos. which was nice. and i can't wait for becky's next book because she has just become my favourite author ever.
A little underwhelming. There’s nothing wrong with this book but it wasn’t very surprising and I didn’t feel like it had much else to say. I was kind of expecting a profound lesson about fully participating in society instead of watching it passively via a crush, but no. (They didn’t even discuss the fact that one of the crushes on Molly’s list is Lin-Manuel Miranda, a 35yo man she’s never met…that’s a little different than a cute boy at summer camp.) Even any points that could be made about how Molly feels about her weight seemed to fall flat. I enjoyed all of the characters but I found Molly to be kind of annoying at times. It was weird how judgmental Molly was of Reid being a “nerd” when she openly states that she has a crush on Lin-Manuel Miranda? All Reid does is wear two LOTR shirts and a Game of Thrones shirt, which is not at all nerdy by current standards. All of the bits about DC/Bethesda/Tacoma Park were overly detailed and annoying. (I also find people from Tacoma Park kind of annoying in real life so that does not help.) It was a fine book overall and I enjoyed reading it but it wasn’t special like Simon vs.
This book is cute and super fun. It reminded me a little of Stephanie Perkins' books (a comparison I don't make lightly!), so if you liked those, you might want to try this.
Fans of Simon vs the Homo Sapiens Agenda should enjoy some quick cameos inserted in this book but this is no Simon.
We have Molly here who has never had a boyfriend and now her twin sister
I was a little bit disappointed that this wasn't really LGBT. I mean, almost every character is but the story is a pure het. As I overcame the frustration that I can never remember summaries, and then make assumptions, the cute romance really got me.
But first the flaws. And this one was also a complaint of mine for Simon. I think Albertalli has a problem of focus. It was even more perceptible here how the main story took long to take shape. On the plus side, her losing time with everyone else's lives but the main character allowed us to meet the wonderful side characters. For Simon, I confess I wasn't too into his friends so this issue bothered me even more. In this book, however, I think I loved everyone. Even Will, the crazy hipster Molly's sister wants to make her boyfriend. Actually even his friend, who barely shows. To be honest, I hoped Molly would have something with the friend instead of Will. There, I said it.
Back to flaws, I didn't know this was in Simon's universe so it came as a good surprise. Then it was just silly. Molly is Abby's cousin, who is Simon's friend. For that reason, Abby is mentioned a lot, and gets to appear during text messages and all that. The problem is that whenever that happened, it was anything but subtle. Also, it added nothing to the plot. A good surprise but distracting, as the story stood for itself.
Now what I really liked was how lovely the romance was. I'm not a fan of love triangles but even that was well executed. I did cheer for one of the them but whenever the other was on the scene, I couldn't help but hope things would happen with him and Molly. Simon had some sort of triangle as well but it was far from being as good, you can see Albertalli's improvement.
This is a different book when it comes to side characters. Diversity doesn't even begin to describe. And the core is an entertaining, can't-help-but-feel-the butterflies coming-of-age romance. Plenty of themes for a book club to discuss, and characters for readers to love. Yes, it's not as good as Simon but it's good nonetheless.
By the way, anyone else super excited for Simon's sequel just announced? From what I read here, Albertalli keeps getting better and better. I can't wait!
Molly and Cassie are the twin daughters of lesbians Patty and Nadine. Cassie is cute and decidedly gay. Molly is somewhat overweight and decidedly straight. Early in the book, Cassie meets Mina and quickly falls for her. Molly, on the other hand, has had 27 crushes but has never been kissed and never had a boyfriend. Mina and Cassie try to set Molly up with Will, Mina’s best friend but there’s no chemistry. Molly, on the other hand, likes dorky Reid, a co-worker at the store at which she has a summer job. Is this going to be crush number 28?
Albertalli tackles several issues in The Upside of Unrequited: twins growing apart when one is in a relationship and the other isn’t, the insecurities of girls whose figures don’t meet the societal norm of pretty or sexy, the legalization of gay marriage. All of this is done in an easy to read, fun story. Readers will like the characters. The situations are real. The writing is descriptive.
Any reader who likes young adult romance can’t go wrong.
This is a light read and fun. Molly is absolutely adorable. And why wouldn't hipster boy like her? Who wouldn't? She might not be a skinny mini but she's wonderful.
Although for me - a nerdy boy who is a huge Tolkien fan ... well, I was rooting for Reid the whole time.
Have a read and see if Molly ends up with a boyfriend or just new friends by the end of the story.
Albertalli has a gift for capturing the true teen voice. Molly is real and the reader can't help empathizing with her situation. A wonderful mix of humour, drama, and adventure - check it out!
I would consider this a "cute" YA novel. It was decent and
Reid is the cutest little dork in all of Middle-Earth.
Cassie is such a bad***.
The family dynamic is
Basically Upside is a light, fluffy, adorable contemporary sure to bring a smile to your face.
I did NOT love this book until about two thirds of the way through.
I did, however, love the last third.
I think maybe it's just because it's the last Becky book I had left to read and I was spending most of my time comparing. I'm really not sure.
Molly (the protagonist) came
But on to the good stuff.
Molly does eventually find herself and she finds her family along the way.
I think being a teenager is just hard. Heck, being a human is hard. And Molly hasn't exactly had the easiest time. Her moms are in love. Her sister is in love. Her best friend and cousin are in love. Molly is just perpetually crushing on someone (rotating different someone's) unattainable.
She is fat and shy and geeky which, in the world of high school, are not really hot commodities. But, as usual in fiction, those things land her exactly where she needs to be.
I loved the realness of the story and the usual Becky snark. And I'm really glad I kept reading because the ending was totally worth it.