Tag Archives: summer after high school

Review: We Fell Apart by E. Lockhart

We Fell Apart: A We Were Liars Novel by E. Lockhart

We Fell Apart
E. Lockhart
Delacorte Press
Published November 4, 2025

Amazon | Bookshop | Goodreads

About We Fell Apart

This gorgeous edition of We Fell Apart will feature stunning sprayed edges, unique printed endpapers, and an exclusive foil-stamped case!

#1 New York Times bestselling author E. Lockhart returns to the world of her TikTok sensation We Were Liars with all her signature beachy gothic atmosphere, family intrigue, and high-stakes romance.

The invitation arrives out of the blue.

In it, Matilda discovers a father she’s never met. Kingsley Cello is a visionary, a reclusive artist. And when he asks her to spend the summer at his seaside home, Hidden Beach, Matilda expects to find a part of herself she’s never fully understood.

Instead, she finds Meer, her long-lost, openhearted brother; Brock, a former child star battling demons; and brooding, wild Tatum, who just wants her to leave their crumbling sanctuary.

With Kingsley nowhere to be seen, Matilda must delve into the twisted heart of Hidden Beach to uncover the answers she’s desperately craving. But secrets run thicker than blood, and blood runs like seawater.

And everyone here is lying.

My Review

I was so excited to return to the We Were Liars story world, which is weird, because it’s a trauma-filled landscape. I love the characters and the way that everything feels a bit distorted, like looking at a story through funhouse mirrors. While this isn’t a Halloween-themed story, and it has an eerie quality that makes it feel like the perfect October read.

Matilda is great. She’s vulnerable because of her abandonment issues and desperate search for identity and permanence. But she’s fierce and practical and not easily pushed aside or silenced.

When she arrives at her father’s house, she finds a community of people who seem adrift in their own ways. It’s a strange group, and I felt driven to keep reading as much because I wanted to understand why everyone was behaving so strangely as wanting to know whether Matilda would finally meet her father.

At first, the secrets unravel slowly, and they seem fairly innocuous. Okay, so her brother isn’t great at cleaning up after himself. Not too serious. Then, things start to unravel more quickly, and Matilda starts to wonder how deep the treachery goes.

Once I hit the 60% mark, I read straight through to the end of the book. I remember really being enamored with We Were Liars when it came out, but I think I like this book just as much.

Content Notes

Recommended for Ages 13 up.

Profanity/Crude Language Content
Mild profanity used a few times.

Romance/Sexual Content
Kissing.

Spiritual Content
None.

Violent Content
Situations of peril. At one point someone holds a pair of scissors to another person’s throat, threatening them. Someone injects another person with a sedative without their consent. This happens a second time, off-scene. References to a fire that killed several teenagers. (Happens before Matilda reaches the town where it occurred.) References to a car accident that killed two people. A dog kills several young birds. Characters discover the body of someone who has died.

Drug Content
References to addiction and recovery. Matilda and some friends drink alcohol together one night. They wind up sick and faced with terrible hangovers the next day.

Note: This post contains affiliate links, which do not cost you anything to use but help support this blog. I received a free copy of this book in exchange for my honest review. All opinions are my own.

Review: Thirsty: A Novel by Jas Hammonds

Thirsty: A Novel
Jas Hammonds
Roaring Brook Press
Published May 14, 2024

Amazon | Bookshop | Goodreads

About Thirsty: A Novel

It’s the summer before college and eighteen-year-old Blake Brenner and her girlfriend, Ella, have one goal: join the mysterious and exclusive Serena Society. The sorority promises status and lifelong connections to a network of powerful, trailblazing women of color. Ella’s acceptance is a sure thing—she’s the daughter of a Serena alum. Blake, however, has a lot more to prove.

As a former loner from a working-class background, Blake lacks Ella’s pedigree and confidence. Luckily, she finds courage at the bottom of a liquor bottle. When she drinks, she’s bold, funny, and unstoppable—and the Serenas love it. But as pledging intensifies, so does Blake’s drinking, until it’s seeping into every corner of her life. Ella assures Blake that she’s fine; partying hard is what it takes to make the cut.

But success has never felt so much like drowning. With her future hanging in the balance and her past dragging her down, Blake must decide how far she’s willing to go to achieve her glittering dreams of success—and how much of herself she’s willing to lose in the process.

My Review

What an incredible book. I felt as though I was right there with Blake, riding the high of being deeply in love and long summer days. But even from the early pages, you get this sense that something is off. Blake doesn’t see it yet, and at first I thought maybe it was just me not buying into the narrative.

(Can we pause for a sec and just appreciate the kind of writing that can do that? Draw you into a story so completely that you both root for the main character and suspect she’s lying to herself? Amazing.)

As the story progresses, it becomes crystal clear that Blake’s relationship with Ella comes at a high personal cost. Even though Blake loves her. Even though Ella loves Blake.

I don’t want to give away what happens, but I do want to say that I appreciate that Hammonds doesn’t end the story where I expected. We follow Blake into the first chapters a life she couldn’t have imagined at the start of the story. We get to see the working out of some of her choices. I love that, and I think that kind of representation is incredibly important in young adult literature.

Thirsty is the second book by Jas Hammonds that I’ve read. Their debut, We Deserve Monuments was fantastic, and yet, somehow, I think Thirsty might be even better. I’m pretty sure Hammonds is now a must-read author for me.

Content Notes

Recommended for Ages 14 up.

Profanity/Crude Language Content
Strong profanity used fairly frequently.

Romance/Sexual Content
Kissing, references to sex and showering/undressing together.

Spiritual Content
None.

Violent Content
Non-consensual outing. Transphobic rhetoric. Toxic relationship elements. Racial microaggressions. Suicidal ideation and self-hate.

Drug Content
Blake and other teens drink alcohol and smoke using a vape pen. While a lot of scenes show drinking, they also show the consequences and regrets that Blake has later. The scenes explore the harm that drinking causes. The character who smokes decides to quit during the book.

Note: This post contains affiliate links, which do not cost you anything to use but help support this blog. I received a free copy of this book in exchange for my honest review. All opinions are my own.