![]() ![]() The novel was so relatable I had to put it down for a few minutes at a time just to wrap my head around what was happening. I read FANGIRL as a story about a young woman trying to find her place in varsity, her attitude to flirting with boys and being flirted with, all while trying to balance her Fanfiction obsession. ![]() There are lots of ups and downs in Cath’s life from boys to professors to family drama that makes this story relatable and unable to put down. The idea of having to start her varsity career in a new town with people she doesn’t know without her twin sister, the sister she’s always shared her life and her room with, throws Cath off balance.Īlong with telling the story of a girl trying to find her place at varsity, it also tells the story of Cath and her obsession with Fanfiction writing and her life online, (hence: FANGIRL). The great varsity plan does not go as she imagined it would when her twin sister, Wren, first announces that she does not want to room with Cath. This time it was about a young adult woman.įANGIRL follows Cather Avery’s life as she starts varsity as a first year student fresh out of high school. I’ve read coming of age novels before, my most recent John Green’s Paper Towns, and they were all about guys. I like FANGIRL mostly as a coming of age story for the main female protagonist Cather Avery. ![]()
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