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F*ck Love, by Tarryn Fisher
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Helena Conway has fallen in love.
Unwillingly. Unwittingly.
But not unprovoked.
Kit Isley is everything she’s not—unstructured, untethered,
and not even a little bit careful.
It could all be so beautiful … if he wasn’t dating her best friend.
Helena must defy her heart, do the right thing, and think of others.
Until she doesn’t.
- Sales Rank: #20191 in eBooks
- Published on: 2015-12-31
- Released on: 2015-12-31
- Format: Kindle eBook
Most helpful customer reviews
162 of 195 people found the following review helpful.
While I didn’t end up loving the book, I can appreciate the story’s message.
By Megan - Reading Books Like a Boss
** This review contains a spoilers. **
Tarryn Fisher has a distinct writing style that’s all her own and she’s back with a somewhat-different love story. Sadly, my issues with the characterization and overall plot prevented me from falling in love with Kit and Helena’s story. And it breaks my heart to say so.
Helena has a vivid and unsettling dream. In the dream, she and Kit are ridiculously in love. They have two kids—one is his—and live in Port Townsend, Washington and she’s a successful illustrator. But in real life, Kit and Helena are not in love. In fact, they barely even know each other. They live in Florida, and Helena doesn’t have an artistic bone in her body. Helena’s best friend, Della, has been dating Kit for five months and is already madly in love with him. Crap.
Despite having her own boyfriend, Helena can’t quite shake the feelings she felt in her dream. Love. Desire. Happiness. Kit should be hers. They should get their happily-ever-after. But what about Della? Hello, moral dilemma. This dream shifts Helena’s perspective and what she wants out of life, compelling her to make a change.
Helena is disorganized, a Ravenclaw turned Slytherin, a horrible artist, and in love with her best friend’s boyfriend. She’s “a lovely mess.” Kit is a writer, self-contained and self-aware, but completely oblivious to the fact that Helena dreamt of a life that includes the two of them and unknowingly caught in a web of unrequited forbidden love. Kit and Helena’s story is not an easy one—it has several ups and downs. But Helena’s evasive tendencies have the reader—and Kit—running to keep up with her.
I found Helena’s quirky characteristics to be a overly exaggerated to the point that she became a caricature. After her dream, Helena tries desperately to recreate the dream life she had with Kit. She takes art classes, starts drinking wine even though she’s a beer drinker, begins talking with Kit in hopes of making him love her back, sleeps with a wine cork because it reminds her of dream Kit. When all hope seems lost, she escapes Kit-saturated Florida, moves to his hometown, hunts down his ex-fianc�e, and moves in with her—all in the name of self-discovery. While these things may have been added to make Helena seem "strange and quirky", it came off as manic and more than a a little bit crazy.
I think Fisher meant for the reader to laugh at her and I did—some of the time. Her internal monologue was quite funny in some moments. But with all of her strange habits and characteristics combined, she didn’t feel real to me at all. They felt completely forced, like the author was trying too hard to make her distinct and unique. I was unable to relate to her, which made it difficult for me to understand her actions.
In many ways, the romance in F*** Love felt like a rehash of Fisher’s Love Me With Lies series, but without the magic or chemistry. I felt no anxiety or desperation for Kit and Helena to be together. While there were some sweet moments between Kit and Helena that I liked, I’d hoped that this book would evoke the same emotions I get when reading a gripping love story—that “OMG I think I will die if they don’t end up together” feeling. Instead, I was left with the worst feeling of all—indifference.
It was almost like Fisher used the bones of her Love Me With Lies characters to create Helena, Della, and Kit. Kit’s character reminded me so much of Caleb (and even Isaac from Mud Vein). [LMWL SPOILERS OMITTED HERE]. Likewise, Helena is known to run away from love and life when things get tough or too emotional—much like Senna (of Mud Vein) and Olivia. While I loved the Love Me With Lies series, I was hoping for a hero and heroine that were completely new, not ones who so closely resembled past characters.
F*** Love lacked a cohesive plot and a sense of structure for the reader to grasp on to. Instead, this book fell victim to many other books’ pitfall—plot whiplash. There was very little resolution of one problem before another problem was thrown into the pot. There was no gradual building of conflict. Instead, the reader got a “and then this happened and then this happened and then this happened” sort of story.
Fisher is notorious for writing unconventional tales, taking her readers out of what’s ordinary and dropping them in the middle of the unexpected. That’s what F***Love was for me. It was unexpected. While I didn’t end up loving the book, I can appreciate the story’s message: Fight for what you want in life and don’t give up.
“Don’t be upset that you can’t attain constant happiness. It’s the quickest way to feel like a failure in life.”
* I received an advanced copy from the author in exchange for an honest review.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
#thisravenclawlovesthisbook
By Angie IsA ReadingMachine
What would you do if you had a realistic dream of the future? Would it change your life? Would you subconsciously make it happen? Or not happen?
Helena's dream changed her life. She saw herself married to her best friend's boyfriend, Kit. Now she can't help but to see him in a new light.
This is the Tarryn Fisher I love (I wasn't a fan of Marrow). The writing was fantastic, I couldn't put it down. I was dying to find out if Kit and Helena made it. Their path wasn't easy. And Fisher isn't known for traditional HEAs, if at all. So I was on the edge of my seat.
One thing I found surprising was how funny it was. It felt like some of Fisher's personality was injected into Helena. I liked her inner thoughts. Fisher wrote them in such a way that's more in tune with the way a person actually thinks. Sometimes choppy and random. I also like how Fisher doesn't rely on erotic scenes to make her books great. But the sexual tension is steamy enough in its own way.
By no means was this book perfect. Sometimes I was confused if we were dealing with the paranormal or not. There were some plot holes. Some things that didn't make sense. Some things I would have liked more information on. But...I didn't care. This book was original and it made me think and feeeeel and I'll carry it with me long after. And I love it when a book can do that. Bravo!
48 of 63 people found the following review helpful.
I'm just.... disappointed.
By MNTRB
I don't want to get into a huge long discussion with spoilers so I'm just going to do a quick and dirty pros/cons list. Overall, I'm still glad I read the book. The message was important and sweet, and that's worth the read. It just wasn't the wonderful, thought provoking, powerful book I'd expected at this point in the author's career.
Pros:
- Good message regarding life philosophy's
- Interesting side characters (would love a book about Greer)
- Vivid writing and great author's voice, clearly talented
- The setting, I so wanted to move to Washington after this!
Cons:
- Massive amount of spelling and punctuation issues. Not like just typos but words in the wrong spots, punctuation missing, and it completely pulls you out of the story. Someone will start talking with no quotations and then there is a quotation at the end of the sentence, so I have to go back and re-read it again to realize that I'm not listening to narration. Or whole words wrong or missing (chunk vs. chuck), like super obvious mistakes that even the most mediocre editors would have picked up..... this is hugely surprising from such a big author and that really bothered me because her readers deserved better at this point in her career.
- Inconsistent story line. Every single time the main characters talk on the phone, she mentions that it's the first time she's heard his voice on the phone. Did she forget all the other times? Why? Is there some sort of psychological issue here we're supposed to pick up on? Amnesia from her dream that also had amnesia in it? I'm confused.
- The main characters are very weak. It's not a love story you want to root for. I didn't want them to be together in the end. She seriously deserved better than Kit. He's the kind of man who you would tell your daughters they deserve better, because she's chasing after him the whole book and he's dangling her along. She completely debases and devalues herself and he lets her. The disrespect he shows her is horrifying. She does so much for him and he just keeps stringing her along.... it didn't make sense. There wasn't a strong or valid reason for it shown to us. But to be honest, he deserved better than Helena too. She's seriously flaky and runs away from everything and doesn't ever really grow from that. We are told she does in the epilogue a bit, but.... we never see it or feel it. She just acts like a child from day one and doesn't ever grow up.
- Going from the last point.... it seriously would have been a more powerful book if they hadn't ended up together. Helena could have grown and showed she valued herself more and that she really found herself. She didnt need him to complete her. That didn't happen in this book at all, she is still codependent even with the HEA. There's no real romance in the book at all, it's more a coming of age book about Helena growing and finding herself, so I think it honestly would have really excelled as a women's fiction novel with Helena as the main focus. F*** love could have been perfect, because it would have been that moral all the way through. As it stands now, the title doesnt make any sense because she literally does everything, including lose herself, for love.
- I feel like there's some sort of underlying story or psychological point we're supposed to have picked up in Helena. I mean, she does some seriously concerning things. She constantly is forgetting everything, including who she is. She has zero motor skills and can't get through one meal without it all on her shirt (one time can be cute, all the time.... see a doctor. Something is wrong). She turns to alcohol for everything and is drunk quite often. She is a completely codependent enabler, and seems to know that and be fine with it. She chases men across the country and stalks their ex girlfriends. She throws fits and lets people treat her horribly. It's just....something is clearly wrong, and it's hinted at more than once in the book that's something is wrong with her... but we're not told what? We're not given more insight or background into what her diagnosis is or how she improves her life.
- The dream really didn't make much sense. It was the whole point of the book and yet it really wasn't woven into the books much. The scenery in the dream was, but the kids in the dream didn't make any sense with what ends up happening and it's just confusing. It seemed too convenient, and a good idea but not really executed properly.
- Random side plots thrown in that have nothing to add to the story and are just confusing (i.e.: [SPOILER] suddenly in the last scene we find out there's a cult leader chasing after her??? What? Who? Why? Huh?)
Anyways, I'm not trying to be a downer. I was just really looking forward to this one. After the progress in the author's career over the last year and how much she's grown, I had such high hopes and wanted something amazing to blow the socks off me at the start of 2016. That wasn't this book. I'll still try her next book and hope this was a fluke, because I still believe in the author.
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