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After having avoided New Adult books for so long, I was a little hesitant to pick up anything by Tammara Webber. However, I read her Between the Lines series and loved it, so I thought I would give Easy a try when I saw it in Barnes and Noble for $5. I wasn’t sure what to expect, because of my thing about going into books knowing nothing about them, and I was very surprised by what I found.
Easy is a story about a girl who is attacked and almost raped, is saved by a stranger, and then stalked by the would-be rapist. It’s intense, and deals with some tough issues, but it is oh-so-good. I was surprised to find that this isn’t really a story about a boy and a girl, a man and a woman, but it’s about a sexual assault survivor who is fucking awesome.
Jacqueline is attacked early on in the book, and throughout the story she has people spreading rumours about her, and she feels awful about herself. She goes through a phase of thinking that the assault was her fault, and that she could have somehow prevented it. But the entire message of this book is that it’s not her fault, and it’s never any woman’s fault if they are assaulted in that way. Webber handled the topic very well, in my opinion, and I was getting very emotional while I was reading.
Jacqueline goes through so much over the course of the book, and she changes as a person and that is fantastic. I loved her, and I was cheering for her the entire way through. The classes she was taking, the email exchanges, the self defence classes, were all brilliantly done and helped to develop Jacqueline’s character further, and Webber has created a brilliant character with Jacqueline.
The secondary characters are freakin’ awesome. I loved Jacqueline’s friends because they were constantly reassuring her and were so patient and kind. Lucas, the love interest, was also great, and totally not my type but I still wanted him and Jacqueline to get together. But, for me, the love story wasn’t the most important part of the book. At all. It was all about Jacqueline, and the overall message behind the story.
I did kind of enjoy the forbidden love thing, because that’s usually awesome, but in the grand scheme of things it didn’t really matter to me. Because I didn’t really feel much for Lucas… as in, I wasn’t attracted to him and I thought he was only important because Jacqueline considered him to be so, I won’t be reading the sequel to this book, because it’s all about him. I don’t really care about finding out more about him, which may sound harsh, but Easy was all about Jacqueline and her story, so I have no feelings towards the companion book.
If you enjoy reading contemporary stories that deal with darker, yet very important topics such as assault and rape, then I would highly recommend this book. Easy can be triggering, I’m sure, but it’s a fantastic book about a woman who survives a horrible attack with the help of her friends, and who comes to recognise that sexual assault would never be her fault.
This sounds like a great read – thanks for reviewing it! Just adding it to my goodreads list 🙂 I’ve read far too many victim-shaming books and I’d like to read one where the female lead realises it’s not her fault.
Your review is so great! However, I don’t feel like I will enjoy it… It is really good that it isn’t really a story about a boy and a girl… it is sometimes so exasperated. The plot is interesting and different from we are get use to contemporary books.
This is one of my favorite NA books ever (which, okay, isn’t saying a lot because the genre mostly sucks) but the story/message is amazing and Jacqueline’s growth is one of the best things to read about. There’s a lot of potential for drama/angst here, but I’m happy Tammara Webber did not go that route. I gotta say, though, that I found Lucas incredibly swoony. 😛 But I totally skimmed the sections of his early life in Breakable haha.
Great review, Amber. Glad you enjoyed it!
Love this book! It’s one of my favourite reads ever.
And I agree with you that the story is all about Jacqueline. I love how she evetually redeemed her self respect and dignity.It was a beautiful and important lesson to all women.I was so proud of her when the book finished.
Great review, Amber!