Reviews

The Theory of Unrequited by Len Webster

ssrosepetal's review against another edition

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4.0

To be honest, I wasn't sure what to expect when I started reading this book. The cover looked promising, the blurb sounding intriguing, and my interest was peaked. I'm glad I gave this book a chance. AJ (Alex and she'd prefer to be called) and Evan were in interesting pair. Best friends for as long as they can remember they were each other's everything. They were young and naive so it doesn't surprise me that they didn't see what was in front of them until it was gone, especially Evan (he is a guy after all). I felt bad for Alex and her struggles but I'm glad that she started to see the mistakes she made it handling this situation near the end of this story. I mean, don't get me wrong, I understand the whole wanting to learn to live for yourself thing, but she could have handled it more maturely. That ending... so simple yet so not at the same time. I dislike cliffhangers because I just want to continue reading and get to their HEA. I'll definitely be patiently (hopefully) waiting for the conclusion to AJ and Evan! *I voluntarily read an advanced copy of this story for an honest and unbiased review.*

bookflutter's review against another edition

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5.0

This is my first read by this author (certainly won’t be my last) and OH MY LLAMAS- the ending—- I hope that was only the beginning! Ahhhhhh! I need book two stat!
Evan and AJ have been best friends forever- this story filled with love, betrayal, drama, angst, love triangle .....it takes falling in love with your best friend and your mind making decisions for you to shut your heartbreak off that can hurt you more-
AJ is beautiful- she’s in love with her best friend Evan—- Evan is in love with her as well but his mind has not caught up with him so in turn AJ’s heart keeps breaking and she gives up Evan and disappears. Until...... he finally finds her....... but is he too late????????? For the record I am team Evan and Ivy all the way

elizabethsprettylittlereads's review against another edition

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4.0

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Tears came to surface within the first few pages of AJ’s prologue. Len Webster took me on a whirlwind of nostalgia with The Theory of Unrequited. It took me back to my time as a silly, naive teenager—dealing with all those new and confusing feelings. And not knowing what to do or say about those feelings. I experienced, like I'm sure many have, at a point during high school—literally my senior year just like AJ, with a friend who I adored, and one who made me feel very similar to the way she did.

“She loved him completely … and he loved her fractionally. Just enough to make her his best friend but not a sliver more.”

This story held so much angst, love, growing-pains, and ultimately betrayal. There’s so much that goes unsaid by these characters, dancing around each other and the way they feel. Times you remind yourself that these are teenagers, and it’s the way most go so cluelessly about things. I love how Len intertwined AJ and Evan’s past with the present, the events that led up to AJ turning her back on a pact with Evan. She did a wonderful job at bringing all these emotions with the story and with her characters.

“She breathed oxygen in him with each flutter of their kiss. He knew right from wrong. He was aware that he was kissing his best friend. He was convinced that this one flawless kiss was right.”

The Theory of Unrequited leaves us on a tortuous cliffhanger, I say that dramatically and affectionately because I can’t wait for book 2, The Solution of Unrequited. Also, I want to add that I’m swooning hardcore over Evan’s older brother Kyle! <3

becsa's review against another edition

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4.0

I really liked Alex and found that she seemed to be living her life for everyone else and not herself. I was so proud of her for choosing a different school and I loved that she kept it secret as she needed to find herself. I was so upset when I saw that she missed her own deadlines due to Evan in different ways and I wanted her to find her own happiness.

I personally didn’t like Evan so many times during the book. I knew he cared for her but at the same time he out himself first so often and then had to make up things to Alex, like prom. I was also mad at Kyle for prom as well and it was because of both brothers that she was unable to date other guys due to them having some sort of claim over her. I understood why Evan was mad at her for not showing up but he didn’t get it at all.

I thought Landon Carmichael was awesome and I loved the banter that he and Alex had together. He truly listened to everything that Alex said and remembered everything. I liked how he made her feel beautiful and appreciated.

As soon as certain things happened I knew the ending was coming. I know it had to happen, but I am hoping that the next book ends how I want it to and not the other way!!

bookishbaobao's review against another edition

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5.0

Another amazing book by Len Webster.
I told myself to slow down, don’t finish the book in one night, savor it, but I didn’t listen.
The Theory of Unrequited is such a beautiful story of a girl (Alexandra aka AJ) who has been best friends with Evan who she has grown to love in more ways than just a friend. She loves him so much that she lost a part of herself and sacrificed her dream school to remain by Evan’s side, and now she is fed up and separated herself from him by going to Duke instead of Stanford (the pact).
I loved that this book brought back characters that we’ve grown to love from a couple of Webster’s past books and I love the new characters that were introduced.
So many ‘ships’ are sailing tonight!!
I don’t even know who I’m rooting for.

OTP Possibilities:
Evan x AJ
Alexi x Kyle
Connecticut x Massachusetts

Note: there is a cliffhanger!! Bring tissues (lots of ‘em)
I hope everyone will find their OTP one day and I hope to find mine too.

Read it, Love it, and Cry with the Rest of Us.

reading_with_2_book_lovers's review against another edition

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4.0

wow ms webster had my heart breaking, soaring and singing with this story and AJ and Evan.
this book gave me all the feels and I devoured it in a day.
I loved that AJ and Evan were best friends made the story all so much better.

florallyplaid's review

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4.0

☆☆☆☆

Oh, my! Where do I begin with AJ and Evan? This book took me through an endless, overwhelming windwhirl of emotions, a few of which I might not be able to put to words. But I'm not surprised; it's just Len's super power.

To start off, we're looking at life through the eyes of Alexandra Parker, a 17/18-year-old hard working student who's in love with the boy next door. However, her beloved Evan is completely oblivious to that fact. It's only the cherry on top to that messy situation that Evan's older brother, Kyle, is in fact completely head over heels in love with Alexandra.

This might seem like somewhat of a cliché storyline, but I guarantee you it has its own magical twists and turns that give off its unique, vibrant yet soothing aura. It emphasizes the importance of family, goes deep into the emotional side of love (other than only the physical) and strays away from the successful, flawless, alpha male MC. The Theory of Unrequited is special in its own way; it's a book you'd never come across twice in a lifetime.

Alexandra

or AJ, as Evan likes to call her when he's not being serious and heart-to-heart, is a smart, determined young girl who falls for her best friend. For the first time in her life, she has to choose between the life she has always painted for herself in her mind or give up everything she has ever dreamt of and follow the whimsical swoon of her heart and join her best friend/true love all the way across the country in a university she doesn't even really want.

The choice gets harder and lines grow blurry, especially for someone her age with little experience at love and life. She needs to set out her priorities, and she chooses her future over the love of her life, consequently threatening the fate of their already strained relationship.

Personally, I thought Alexandra is a somewhat strong character in her own way, going all in for big decisions like that, knowing how much she would have to give up in the process. She needed another chance, and she took it willingly, and she was well aware of how 'toxic love' could sometimes influence her decisions terribly.

On the other hand, Alexandra literally whorships the ground Evan walks on and forgives him for every mistake. He's a great guy, but I thought that he's also a bit selfish and egotistical and self-centred and he's completely oblivious to her feelings. He wrongs her more than a few times and exhausts all her chances, and he isn't supportive of her own choices in life.

Evan

Evan's childhood and past events are mostly his main drive. Being an unloved, unwanted child ever since he was born, he has been neglected, ignored, and he lacked the motherly touch he then later found in Alexandra's parents. Therefore, he sees her as no more than a sister and a true friend who stands by him through thick and thin, and in a way, he believes he owes it to her to give back what her parents have offered him, a solace.

Evan's changing emotions confuse him to no end, and he's torn between being faithful to his second parents and cherishing their daughter for the rest of her life, and letting his true feelings for her come to the surface. He can't admit he might be experiencing something else other than sisterly love for her only because the thought of it alone would be a tear through the complete trust her parents had given him from the start. He decides he needs to act fast and set his feelings straight, especially when, for the first time, he realises that Alexandra, whom he took for granted almost all his life, might actually be slipping through his fingers.

Evan's character is complicated and I can't tell if I like him or hate him. He's a good man, loyal, truthful, genuine and caring. He sees Alexandra in a different light from anyone else and treats her like a treasured prize, but still his past keeps haunting him, and the urge to run away from the city where he found no love or care from his own family takes over him. He hates his brother who stole the light from him and is their parents' favourite son, successful and happy and well-known across the state. It doesn't help that Kyle is in love with Alexandra. Evan slips, and we can see his true feelings for Alexandra at this point.

Yet, his burning desire to leave and never come back blinds him from the fact that he isn't putting his best friend's interests at best anymore, and he might be letting her parents down for real this time.

The story follows a steady pace of a dual alternating POV, flipping through a series of flashbacks that go deeper into the pair's pasts, until the big twist towards the end and the climax just after that. It's not a light read, based purely on the emotional connection between the characters rather than the usual story arc.

Overall, The Theory of Unrequited is a complicated, emotional story that will definitely leave you nursing a terrible book hangover and begging for more.
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