Saturday, August 27, 2011

Teen Romance Novel Moves, Mature, And Honest


When Kyle Davis returns to town for his high school years, Chelsea Davenport is immediately taken with him. Kyle and Chelsea have long known their fathers were business partners long gone, but after the suicide committed Kyle's father, his mother sent him away for a while. Chelsea now see a new light, as an adult male, young and attractive. But Chelsea is not the only girl who feels this way about Kyle. With his good looks and abs tight, football player Kyle is a trophy of other girls are determined to get and McClarin cheerleader is very willing to do whatever it takes to get Kyle to her, even if it's threats and illegal activities. Kyle cheerleader falls to the wild, or will prefer the more mature of Chelsea?

Boy Meets Girl. The boy and the girl has problems. It will be a boy and a girl able to overcome the problems and stay together? Mary Flinn "One" may be an ancient pattern, but love is so important in our lives, that when the story is well told, as in this case, we do not mind re-reading the story of lovers, but we are immersed in history. "One" is the story of a young man and a young woman who find each other in the middle of the madness in the world, in this case, high school, and in case of bad weather, together, as the death of a person dear, or share them with other set aside. Eventually, they learn about themselves and the world around them and preparing to enter adulthood and the beginning of the report made.

Flinn The characters are believable and mature. Readers will welcome Kyle and Chelsea and hope their love lasts. Although the young lovers are in some difficult situations, what is remarkable about the book is in many ways an atmosphere supporting cast of characters, relatives and friends who offer the stability of Kyle and Chelsea. This environment is one in which every young man and woman should be so lucky to be raised. Although their lives are not perfect, Chelsea and Kyle find the strength from each other, their families, their friends, their coaches and teachers.

However, all the characters are without their share of drama. Teen drinking is involved, and some wild behavior and unacceptable. Flinn appropriately address these issues realistically, not the conduct or idealizing moral condemnation of them. As a result, the characters multi-faceted, while the protagonists are mainly responsible and good role models for young adults, as evidenced by the local projects they pursue.

Set in North Carolina, where the author lives, "The One" perfectly captures the region and the lifestyle. Readers may or may not be familiar with the area, but they will appreciate the real value that reflects the life of a teenager in the early twenty-first instead of becoming a stereotypical Southern romance or a story that is generally to attract a teen audience. Adolescent readers, no doubt, is pleased to see characters like themselves, but adults will enjoy the book too. As a man reader, I found surprisingly invested in the relationship between Kyle and Chelsea, the desire to be happy together because the work does not Flinn expert in the development of his characters. I'm not a big fan of the description, but Flinn know how to describe a house, a cottage, the beach to make the adjustment to life and keep it relevant to the story with the parameters of development and reveal information about characters.

Flinn has written a grace and elegance, which, along with the wedding in the end it'll give you that, remember the recent film of Jane Austen's romantic comedy. The drama of history is almost always outside, never become unbelievable or far, and the choice of characters and all actions seem to fall naturally into place. I was surprised by the Flinn creative imagination of a fantasy world so that it felt so real, and also impressed with the way the writing was perfectly balanced so it never was at the top. Flinn did not bite more than you can chew, but has simple situations and attracts all the nuances, emotions and integrity of his characters. In this way, it's like Jane Austen, tell a simple story, with one or two obstacles to love the main character, but in the end, the final creation of a completely satisfactory for the reader. In short, the writing is sincere and credible because of it.

If you've never read romance novels, this is the "one" to start, and if you're already a fan of romance, Mary Flinn is definitely a new favorite author. I trust his pen to produce a lot more love stories.

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