![]() You have the cheerleader and the delinquent, sunshine and grumpy, friends to lovers and also enemies to lovers. This book had a lot of popular (and in my opinion overused) tropes. However, at times it was almost what made the book a hundred times better. The two main characters are your stereotypical “I’m not like other girls/boys” trope. This book is your typical teen book filled to the brim with cliques. Or right under my nose, and I wouldn’t even know it.Īfter reading Birthday Girl and not loving it, I decided to give Penelope Douglas another shot. ![]() I should’ve gotten his number or picture or something. Did he die? Get arrested? Knowing Misha neither would be a stretch. Name’s Ryen loves Gallo’s pizza and worships her iPhone. Until I run across a photo of a girl online. No social media, no phone numbers, no pictures. ![]() She’s the only one who keeps me on track, talks me down, and accepts everything I am. Sometimes there’s one a week or three in a day, but I need them. Her letters are always on black paper with silver writing. Whether or not Eminem is the greatest rapper ever…Īnd that was the start. And in no time at all, we were arguing about everything. It didn’t take long for us to figure out the mistake. My teacher, believing Ryen was a boy like me, agreed. Thinking I was a girl, with a name like Misha, the other teacher paired me up with her student, Ryen. In fifth grade, my teacher set us up with pen pals from a different school. I can’t help but smile at the words in her letter. ![]()
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