Book Traveling Thursdays: Free! A New Favorite

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Hello, welcome back to another Book Traveling 168709Thursdays, which a weekly meme created by Cátia @The Girl Who Read Too Much and Danielle @Danielle’s Book Blog. The goal is to share the covers of a book related to that week’s theme, which you can see at the Goodreads group, indicating the original cover, the one of your country, your favorite and least favorite.

This week’s theme is “Freebie week. Today you can choose whatever you want either it is a book you’ve been wanting to talk for a long time or one of the previous themes”. I’m going with Making Faces by Amy Harmon, because more people should give this amazing book a chance.


Original COver:

I’m not a big fan of the original cover, but hey, it’s also not terrible.

COVER FROM MY COUNTRY (PORTUGAL) & COVER FROM THE COUNTRY I LIVE IN (SPAIN):

No cover for Portugal, but the book is out in Spain, and I do like the cover, because it definitly reminds me of Fern.

FAVORITE COVER(s):

                        

I love the new cover! I also like the German one, even though I think it has nothing to do with the book inside. Then, I also kind of love the French one, because it’s just so Fern.

LEAST FAVORITE COVER(S):

                       

My least favorites are: Italian, Brazilian and Estonian covers. I have to say that I kind of like the Italian one, but it just has absolutely nothing to do with the story.

Making Faces (Amy Harmon)

2017 NEW ADULT READING CHALLENGE | BOok About Friendship

Ambrose Young was beautiful. The kind of beautiful that graced the covers of romance novels, and Fern Taylor would know. She’d been reading them since she was thirteen. But maybe because he was so beautiful he was never someone Fern thought she could have . . . until he wasn’t beautiful anymore.

Making Faces is the story of a small town where five young men go off to war, and only one comes back. It is the story of loss. Collective loss, individual loss, loss of beauty, loss of life, loss of identity. It is the tale of one girl’s love for a broken boy, and a wounded warrior’s love for an unremarkable girl. This is a story of friendship that overcomes heartache, heroism that defies the common definitions, and a modern tale of Beauty and the Beast, where we discover that there is a little beauty and a little beast in all of us.


Oh wow… talk about emotional ride! I started reading this book at work, but I’m glad I decided it to finish it at night, alone, completely alone. Because the kind of crying that was going on there, was the kind that’s not remotely cute. Ugly cry!

Also, while this book is a romance, I wanted to explain why I chose to use it for the “Book About Friendship” category on the #NAReads2017 bookish bingo. While Making Faces primarily focus on Fern and Ambrose and their romance, what shaped said romance and their lives, for that matter, are the friendships they each have throughout their lives. So I thought this category fit perfectly with this book.

First of all, I need to talk about the writing of this book. This was definitly a very unique book in the way it’s written and formatted. Amy Harmon wrote this book in the third person, but there are no specific points of view, instead she gives access to the feelings and thoughts of several of the people involved in a certain scene, which is so different, and it gave me the ability to connect and get to know all the characters so very well, even the secondary ones who didn’t appear that much. But because I knew what they were thinking and how something was affecting them, I was able to connect much better to all of them. And if there’s one thing wonderful about this book besides the writing, it is the wonderful characters.

Then the story is told throughout several years, but there are a few time periods more important than others. The first significant one is when Fern, Ambrose, Rita and Bailey are 10, and we get glimpses of a lot of important things that happened back then. The second important time period is their senior year of high school, 2001/02, and the events that followed. The third, and most relevant portion of the story takes place after Ambrose returns from the war. We get to see these characters grow through several years, trials and tribulations. I loved the way this story was told. Be warned though, that the story is not told in completely linear form, but it totally worked for me.

This is a very character driven story, and the characters are amazing. Fern is a selfless girl, genuinely good, who lives to make other people happy. But even though she’s shy and very self conscious, she faces her fears. I was in awe with this girl, from the very start of the book. She looks at the world in such a beautiful way, that it warmed my heart. Yes, she has been in love with Ambrose all her life, but it was never about how beautiful he was on the outside, but what he had inside, the way he treated people and carried himself. The way he loved his father and his friends and his coach. The way he loved Shakespeare and valued people. She goes through such an amazing transformation through the years, but she’s always very true to herself and the people she loves.

Ambrose was also amazing, he was fierce and protective. He changed so much though… When he was in school he was seen as a hero, everyone admired him and put their hopes and dreams on him, and he felt pressured and unsure. Wrestling stopped being about him and the sport and about everyone’s expectations and he was lonely. So he decided to enlist, to fight for his country, and he convinced his 4 best friends to join him, a decision that brought him so much grief and guilt… It impossible not to love and understand Ambrose throughout this book, especially when he feels he lost everything that made HIM.

Bailey was such an expected character who totally stole the “show” for me. Bailey has Duchenne muscular dystrophy and from a very young life had a perfect understanding of his condition and his limitations. But he refused to let himself be defined by it. He was such a strong young man, who spoke his mind, and made everyone around him think and rethink things. He defied expectations and misconceptions. He loved wholeheartedly. And he’s my favorite.

The way the lives of the characters intertwine is amazing. Bailey and Fern help Ambrose see that he still has a beautiful and full life to live. Fern and Ambrose help Bailey live his life to the fullest. And both boys protect and take care of Fern, until she see herself as they do. Beautiful.

The messages of this book are beautiful, but the most important one is that beauty has more to do with what’s inside, than on the outside. And this is something all 3 main characters struggle with, especially Fern and Ambrose.

The writing is gorgeous, the characters are beautiful, and so is the story. I honestly don’t understand how is it possible that not everyone has read this book yet, because it is simply amazing, and I want everyone to pick it up and READ IT! NOW. You won’t be sorry! Just make sure to have tissues with you at all times, ok?

April TBR

Hello people! I think I did super well on last month’s TBR, I ended up reading 20 books last month, and most of them were on my TBR 🙂 . But this month I’m anticipating I’ll have a little less time for reading, so I’m keeping my March TBR small.

  1. Could You Love An Apple? (Love Stories #2) by Becky Jerams – I actually just finished this one, but it took me such a long time…
  2. Twist by Kylie Scott
  3. Daisy and the Front Man (Backstage Pass #3) by Rebekah L. Purdy
  4. Dancing in the Rain by Kelly Jamieson
  5. The Butterfly Project by Emma Scott
  6. The Raven Boys (The Raven Cycle #1) by Maggie Stiefvater
  7. Mixed Up by Emma Hart
  8. Girl out of Water by Laura Silverman
  9. Pipe Dreams by Sarina Bowen
  10. Noteworthy by Riley Redgate
  11. Making Faces by Amy Harmon – I hope we can get to this one this month

March TBR

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Last month I had a huge TBR, but I managed to read 15 books, and most of the books were ARCs, so that was cool. I’m lowering my TBR for this month, but hoping to still manage to include a few more reads.

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  1. A Boy Like You by Ginger Scott –  I actually started this one yesterday and it’s heartbreaking and beautiful so far
  2. Twisted Palace by Erin Watt
  3. The Inexplicable Logic of My Life by Benjamin Alire Sáenz – I started this one, because it will take me a long time to read it… stupid protected pdfs…
  4. Queens of Geek by Jen Wilde
  5. Egomaniac by Vi Keeland – Weak moment yesterday, and I started this audiobook while carrying my luggage around, and then I finished it before I went to sleep…
  6. Sugar, We’re Going Down by M. H. Soars
  7. Goodnight, Nic by Marley Jacobs
  8. Goodbye Paradise (Hello Goodbye #1) by Sarina Bowen
  9. Goodbye Days by Jeff Zentner
  10. Operation Prom Date (Tactics in Dating, #1) by Cindi Madsen
  11. Making Faces by Amy Harmon
  12. Could You Love An Apple? (Love Stories #2) by Becky Jerams
  13. Definitions of Indefinable Things by Whitney Taylor
  14. Optimists Die First by Susin Nielsen

February TBR

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This month will be crazy! I went a little overboard with my netgalley requests, and ended up getting way too many ARCs for this month, most of them YA from Entangled Crush. Check out my enormous TBR for February.

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  1. There’s Something About Nik by Sara Hantz
  2. The Feeling of Forever (Love Unplugged #2) by Jamie Howard
  3. Weddings, Crushes, and Other Dramas (Creative HeArts, #6; Willa and Finn, #2) by Emily McKay
  4. Any Boy But You (North Pole, Minnesota, #1) by Julie Hammerle
  5. A Thousand Letters by Staci Hart
  6. Making Faces by Amy Harmon
  7. Off the Ice (Juniper Falls, #1) by Julie Cross
  8. Optimists Die First by Susin Nielsen
  9. Cheater by Rachel Van Dyken
  10. You’re Welcome, Universe by Whitney Gardner
  11. Definitions of Indefinable Things by Whitney Taylor
  12. Daisy and the Front Man (Backstage Pass #3) by Rebekah L. Purdy
  13. A Boy Like You by Ginger Scott
  14. Ten Thousand Skies Above You (Firebird #2) by Claudia Gray
  15. The Cad and the Co-Ed (Rugby #3) by L.H. Cosway Penny Reid
  16. A Million Worlds with You (Firebird #3) by Claudia Gray
  17. Be My Hero (Forbidden Men #3) by Linda Kage
  18. Paper Princess (The Royals #1) by Erin Watt

I doubt that I’ll be able to read all 18 books, and follow this huge TBR, but most of these are ARCs, so I need to read at least those. Wish me luck…