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A tender, true-to-life novel about an anxious college freshman who would rather write fanfiction than face the real world, and slowly learns to step into her own story. Warm, funny, and quietly wise about growing up.
The Review
Rainbow Rowell understands something most coming-of-age novels miss: that the scariest part of growing up is not the big dramatic break but the small daily terror of being a person in rooms full of strangers. Cath arrives at university clinging to the things that have always kept her safe, her twin sister, her elaborate fanfiction about a beloved boy-wizard series, the inside of her own head. Then her sister wants distance, her roommate is intimidating, and the world keeps insisting that Cath participate in it. The novel is the gentle, deeply felt story of how she learns to.
What makes the book special is how seriously it takes Cath's anxiety without ever pathologizing or pitying her. Her reluctance to go to the dining hall alone, her retreat into writing, the way she manages a father who needs managing, are all rendered with enormous tenderness. Rowell writes the texture of freshman year, the loneliness and the small thrilling firsts, so accurately that anyone who has been an anxious eighteen-year-old will feel seen. This is a campus novel about the interior weather of starting over.
There is romance, and it is lovely, a slow-burn with a warm, patient boy that develops out of late nights and shared work rather than melodrama. But the love story is not the spine of the book; Cath's relationship with her sister and her own creative voice are. Rowell takes fanfiction seriously as a real and valid form of making art, and Cath's growth as a writer, learning when to lean on someone else's world and when to build her own, mirrors her growth as a person in a way that is genuinely moving.
The novel is gentle and a little long, and that is worth naming. Readers who want high stakes or fast plotting may find its rhythms low-key and its conflicts modest, and the extended excerpts of Cath's in-world fanfiction will charm some readers and test the patience of others. Cath herself is a passive protagonist by design, which means the pleasures here are cumulative and quiet rather than propulsive. Come for character and atmosphere and it delivers in full.
Read it when you want a hug of a book that still respects your intelligence, one that treats a shy young woman's small brave steps as the genuine drama they are. It is funny, soft-hearted, and quietly wise about the work of becoming yourself, and it leaves you rooting hard for a girl learning that she is allowed to take up space. A perfect comfort read with real substance underneath. Rowell makes the quiet bravery of an ordinary freshman feel like the most important story in the world, and for the length of the book it is.
Reviewed by Sloane
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