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The Year Of The Great Seventh (2013)

The Year of the Great Seventh (2013)

Book Info

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Rating
3.87 of 5 Votes: 5
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Language
English
Publisher
Drayton Press

About book The Year Of The Great Seventh (2013)

Never (before this book) have I read a book that made me want to kill myself or vomit.I really wanted to like this book. I was in the middle of Earthbound by Aprilynne Pike and Indelible by Dawn Metcalf but when I got this I needed to start this immediately. The dialog was cliched, there was no plot, and Sophie and her feelings never made sense. Let me explain.1) Sophie sees Nate, the pretty, popular boy looking at her (this is on page one, maybe two)2) Nate and Sophie talk for a second at this party and its basically the first time they have talked (a few pages later)3) Nate beats up this kid because he was holding Sophie (a page after that)4) Sophie freaks out5) Sophie says that she needs to know why he did it6) Nate explains that his grandfather was crazy and he is too (this is about the day after the party)7) Nate tells Sophie not to hang out with him because he might hurt her, and because he is popular8) Sophie agrees and becomes depressed9) Sophie is very depressed because Nate ignores her. (about from 30-50)10) Sophie invites Nate to a movie premiere11) Nate has an episode and almost commits suicide but don't worry Sophie made it in time and they make out and then Nate stops (page 100 or so)Like there was no relationship between Nate and Sophie, there is no background or reasons for their relationship. They talked for maybe a total of 20 minutes, and only about Nate's illness. They never form a connection, but then Sophie literally become depressed when he tells her they can't talk. She stops caring about school and she lives in a fog. I only made it halfway through this book and I will never ever read it again. I received this book in a Goodreads First Reads giveaway.When I was little I used to love the Olsen twin movie, "It Takes Two," and my favorite part of that movie was when the evil future step-mom, Clarisse, would describe something as "aaaabsoluuuutely adoooorable." Every time the word absolutely was used in this book, which was often (like every page), I kept reading it like that and it made the book so much more entertaining, although annoying.The Year of the Great Seventh isn't a bad book, by any means. Indeed, it reads much better than many other independently published books I've read through the Goodreads First Reads program. It tells the story of Hollywood teen Sophie who falls in love with the school's popular bad boy Nate and discovers something weird is starting to happen to them. Through Sophie's love of history and Egyptian mythology, she discovers their lives are tangled in a prophecy related all the way back to Cleopatra and Marc Anthony and they set off to solve the riddle and save his life. While the end of the book picks up speed immensely, the beginning was brutal. Page after page after page descriptions of high school parties, pointless chats with friends, and full life stories of minor characters that have no impact on the plot whatsoever. Then there were the random tangents…like Sophie's college tour of NYU where she meets several more unnecessary characters that have no other purpose than making her question her feelings for Nate…which pretty much goes against the theme since the whole book was about how much Sophie loved Nate.And on that note, I just can't stand when authors of the Young Adult genre don't take a minute to step back and look at what they've written from the point of view of their reader. This book's target audience is definitely teenage girls who want to read about high school drama, romance, and mystery, but here's the unfortunate underlying theme, described perfectly in a quote from page 227:"Professor Silverman's words, my future, my parents, my friends, my grades, and my life were swirling out of control, but there was only one person able to keep it all together: Nate." Yeah, we get it, they're in love and all, but seriously? Is that the message we want young girls to get? Geez, at least Bella Swan cared about her family and school. So, in conclusion, I have higher standards for my Young Adult heroines and, therefore, I will not be recommending this book.

Do You like book The Year Of The Great Seventh (2013)?

This is a did not finish for me. I got about 15% in and it just didn't grab me.
—zayan

Interesting story but perhaps too much teenage angst vs storyline.
—Z15Mic

Hey this book is awesome!! HELLO NEW YORK!
—krystal

Kinda poorly written
—Tango

Awesome Novels
—KingK95

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