Fisher Amelie
Author of Vain
Series
Works by Fisher Amelie
Lust (The Seven Deadly, #4) 12 copies
Envy (The Seven Deadly, #7) 11 copies
Binge (The Seven Deadly, #6) 11 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Gender
- female
Members
Reviews
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Statistics
- Works
- 14
- Members
- 683
- Popularity
- #37,041
- Rating
- 3.9
- Reviews
- 50
- ISBNs
- 18
Sophie Price is rich, vain, self-absorbed, and universally adored due to her appearance. But even though I think I was meant to hate her in the beginning of the book, I really didn't. She had nonexistent parents, and she felt pain from rejection and fear of it. I could totally relate to feeling like that... and crying in the shower.
So the ridiculous parents get her sent to Uganda to serve probation for a drug charge. And where is Uganda you might ask?? Well according to Wikipedia it's a "landlocked country in East Africa, bordered by Kenya". How the hell is Sophie going to make it there?? I don't even think I could make it there and I'm no princess (ok I kind of am).
So she goes to this orphanage and I totally expected her to be a brat about it. But once she gets there, she's on a journey... and you're right there with her. The orphans completely soften all of Sophie's hardness. Then she meets Ian.
Ian sees through all of her B.S. and he doesn't like her!! Now her fear of rejection comes out in full force. But the more she opens her heart to her new life in Africa, the more Ian sees through to the true Sophie. I loved the non-forcedness of the relationship in this book. And also the way you can actually learn something about a part of the world without it being shoved at you annoyingly. Fisher Amelie really knows how to weave all of those aspects of the story together nicely.
So the best part for me was Sophie's damage due to not being loved by her parents. It was really apparent in all that she did throughout the book that there was this hole in her. An emptiness that she wanted to fill by having people tell her how beautiful she was. Then it just came to a point where she felt full without needing to feel beautiful and perfect on the outside. It was a cool thing to read about.
The only reason I didn't give it a full rating is because I didn't like that the description didn't mention going to Africa in it. I had no idea Sophie was going to an African orphanage, and that's kind of something I'd like to know since like 80% of the book takes place there. I don't think it would've stopped me from reading it by any means, but I just want to know what to expect going into it.
Overall: Yes I definitely recommend! It's definitely a journey kind of book... you'll go places with this one. Very cool topic to read about!
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