![]() ![]() (That’s something I can relate to) I also love how self-aware she is, she knows her faults even if she often tries to hide them from everyone else. I loved her sense of humour and how she uses that and sarcasm to keep people at bay and to cover up how she really feels. I read most of this book in one sitting, and to be honest if I’d started it earlier on on the day I first picked it up, I’d probably have read it in one day too. I read some five star reads last year but none of those books were ones that I devoured quite like The Exact Opposite of Okay. It’s been so long since I’ve fallen so hard and fast for a book and a main character. This review is probably just going to be me gushing about how The Exact Opposite of Okay gave me all the feels. ![]() ![]() Izzy is about to find out that the way the world treats girls is not okay, and she’s not going to stand for it. Izzy, along with her best friend Ajita, sets out to figure out who’s behind the vicious website while still trying to maintain her grades, humour and sanity. But when photos involving her, a politician’s son and a garden bench emerge, the trolls set out to take her apart. Izzy never expected to be eighteen and internationally reviled. ![]()
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