Reviews

Ljubav je ušetala, by Marisa de los Santos

cathi_p's review against another edition

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4.0

4 stars because it was just what I needed right now. A story about love in all of it's glorious forms.

sierranevada005's review against another edition

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2.0

Read as the bonus book for the Spellbound book club, and I was not a fan. I did listen to it on audio, which might've added to the overall awful experience, but the grating nature of the main character's inner monologue was just not enjoyable at all. The most disappointing part was that the story was actually very interesting, and the writing was not bad. The characters were just not all that likeable, and therefore their story wasn't either, 2 stars.

bonniekitts's review against another edition

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2.0

In the end, I was happy to read this. I did not care for the first half as it was so depressing. I wasn't a fan of Cornelia. She was too much for me with too many references to movies and books. The book dripped with description after description. I liked Clare and was curious enough about her to keep reading, but I was disturbed by her situation. The end wraps up happy, warm and fuzzy which I think I needed. It was all a little too convenient, however.

mimireads320's review against another edition

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1.0

This is the second time I have tried to read this book and I have failed.

I can't put my finger on it- but I just loose interest in the plot. I read about 120 pages and I am having trouble keeping my attention with it. Written in two points of view- the chapters are not too entirely long-however, its not moving fast enough for me.

I think I am giving up and trading it back. :-/

kcherry's review against another edition

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I didn't care for all the film references & the writing style

snowmaiden's review against another edition

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5.0

This book came out in 2005, and it's been on my to-read list since early 2013, one of the first books I ever added on Goodreads. (Don't ask me what my reason was for adding it over 8 years ago, because I really don't have any idea.) I only decided to read it now because I was looking at a list of books for springtime reading, and another book by this author was on there. (The joke was on me, because it turns out this particular novel is set during the Christmas season!) And yet, as so often happens with me, I feel I came to this book at exactly the right time.

The prose in this novel is like a dream. (I marked a ridiculous number of quotes, and I could have marked many, many more. I just love the voice of the narrator, Cornelia. She seems like an old friend who's whispering all her secrets in my ear.) The plotting, on the other hand, is kind of crazy. There are times when the author needed something to happen, and there is absolutely no logical reason on earth why that thing would happen, but she drives a bulldozer straight through all the obstacles and just makes it happen anyway. Ordinarily that kind of thing would drive me crazy, but for this book, I'm prepared to make an exception.

I guess what I loved most is the feeling that the book gave me. So many romance novels are "fantasy machines," as an English professor of mine once memorably called them. You put a couple of people in, you turn the crank, and out comes true love. This book, although shelved in the romance section of my local library, isn't like that at all, in spite of all the contrived plotting. It's about what happens when you put two people in the fantasy machine and what comes out isn't true romantic love, but something infinitely more complicated and wonderful. It's about real-life love and how it's both much better and much worse than our silly romantic dreams. Most of all, it's about how, to paraphrase the Rolling Stones, "You can't always get what you want, but you get what you need."

This book has been waiting so long for me to read it, and maybe it's because it's taken me this long to be ready for it. I hope I can live up to the lessons it has taught me about bravery and honesty.

eebeck's review against another edition

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challenging dark emotional sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character

2.5

christiek's review against another edition

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2.0

I thought this started off as an awfully well written, charming, interesting, romantic novel. The alternate POV chapters were great. Then it becomes less charming, the main character grating with idiotic streams of consciousness, and the whole thing syrupy. I plan to try another of de los Santos's novels but not the next in this series.

heyhannahrae's review against another edition

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5.0

Five stars isn’t enough. I love this book.

casehouse's review against another edition

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3.0

Overly romanticized. The writing itself was not my thing. The 11 year old character was not believable at all.