Cover Image: What If It's Us

What If It's Us

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Member Reviews

What If It's Us is a YA novel by two well-known authors that combines classic romcom tropes with a realistic sense of teenagers navigating life. Arthur is in NYC for the summer and it's living up to his dreams. Ben has lived in New York all his life and has recently broken up with his boyfriend, who he's also stuck in summer school with. When Arthur and Ben meet by chance in a post office, it isn't clear whether the universe is trying to get them together or ruin things between them.

What really sets What If It's Us apart is the way that it both embraces romantic tropes—such as someone only being in the city for a limited time—but also gives them a realistic spin, showing how life can seem like a musical or a comedy when really it is just life, full of ups and downs. There is a sense of uncertainty throughout the book as to what will happen with Arthur and Ben which powers the narrative and shows how it is difficult to expect good or bad with confidence. The supporting characters are endearing, particularly Ben's best friend Dylan, and the book is a great light read that gives complexity to its teenage characters.

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Thank you NetGalley and Simon and Schuster UK for providing me with a copy for review.

This collaborative book between Adam Silvera and Becky Albertalli follows two young boys in New York, Arthur and Ben, who meet in a post office one day when Arthur is running errands for his internship and Ben is attempting to mail back his ex-boyfriend's belongings. The pair feel a connection and are awash with luck, as though fate is pulling them together, but they also face many mishaps along the way, as though the universe is also trying to pull them apart.

It was such a wonderful and easy novel to read that I read it in just a few sittings across a single day. The concept is a really interesting take on the meet-cute trope that I haven't seen before and was great to read. It made the story unique and revived the trope by adding a layer of tension and confusion to their meeting. It was one of the many aspects about it that demonstrated the perfect blend Adam Silvera's and Becky Albertalli's writing styles.

  The characters themselves were great and felt so realistic. It was easy to understand many of their actions whilst also becoming frustrated and needing to keep reading to find out what's going to happen. I loved how the novel switched perspectives between Ben and Arthur so that you could really understand each character and see the story from their point of view, as well as how each author had wrote from the perspective of a different character, making them feel very separate and unbiased. Each author managed to brilliantly encompass the other author's writing with their own so that the novel flowed seamlessly and the characters remained consistent when they were being wrote about and included in the chapters from the other characters perspective.

One of my favourite things about this novel was the ending. I found as I was reading it that it was impossible to predict what was going to happen, especially when you consider the typical endings found in each authors respective books, and I loved the way it eventually rounded up. It was fitting and true to both authors.

Overall, I loved reading this and can definitely see it being a novel that I would re-read. I highly recommend it and can't wait for it to be released so that I can see everyone's thoughts and reactions to this beautiful story.

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[this review will be up on my blog, acquadimore.wordpress.com, on October 5, 2018]

What If It’s Us is a standalone contemporary book set in New York City during the summer. The main characters are two gay boys, Adam and Ben, who meet at a post office but do not exchange their numbers and names. This book follows them as they try to find each other after that.

This was one of my most anticipated books for the second half of this year (thank you Simon & Shuster UK Children’s for the ARC!) because I had liked some of Albertalli’s and Silvera’s previous novels – especially Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda and They Both Die at the End. While I did have some conflicting feelings about this book, I can’t say I’m disappointed.

I love reading about realistic diverse casts. The characters from What If It’s Us not only read like realistic teenagers, they read like real people, and the way they interacted never felt forced, even when the coincidences in this book were a bit over-the-top.
This is a book that understands teens, their friendships and their romantic relationships. It talks about what it’s like when two people in your friend group get together and then break up, about the awkwardness that follows, about what it’s like to try to remain friends with your ex.

I also loved the diversity here. This is a m/m story in which one of the main characters is Jewish and has ADHD (it’s mentioned that he takes medication for that), the other is Puerto Rican and white-passing. This book also talks about passing privilege and what it’s like to be openly gay in New York.
There are also chronically ill and biromantic asexual side characters.

I really liked reading about Arthur and Ben’s relationship. It was the perfect, realistic combination of messy, awkward and really cute, and I loved it for that. Arthur and Ben are sometimes immature and impulsive, and there’s miscommunication, but it never felt like relationship drama for the sake of it.

One of the things I liked the most about What If It’s Us – and I realize it may be an unpopular opinion – was the ending, which made me like this book a lot more. I always love books that explore the many forms relationships can have, and I love books whose focus is a couple that does not take the usual “romance novel” path. I’m also always there for every book about taking your chances, even if it the result may not be as perfect as you hoped (how many “not throwing away my shot” Hamilton references there were here?).
Anyway, I recommend not going into this expecting it to be a book in the romance genre, even if it is about a romance.

Another thing I loved about this book was the humor. The writing wasn’t always perfect, but the dialogues were always really good. Sometimes I’m surprised by how serious teens are in contemporary novels. Here, they aren’t, and this book often made me smile.

However, I have to say that there were some things I didn’t like about this book. The pacing was off, because this book was way longer than it should have been: there were some parts, especially before the ending, that were somewhat boring. I also would have toned down the pop culture references, there were too many of them, and I often didn’t understand what the characters were talking about.

Here’s the thing: American contemporary authors often assume that everyone who is going to read their books knows everything about the US – there were no descriptions of the setting because you’re supposed to know how it looks like, the references were never explained – but it’s not true. It would be fine if people living in the US were their only audience, but they aren’t. American books are read/translated in many countries (…my copy was an ARC of the UK edition) and I wish authors from the US stopped assuming so much.

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What a lovely read!
I had only read one of Becky Albertalli's books before and none of Adam Silvera's but this cute fun read made me want to rush out and get them all.
There are lots of fun references to pop culture and fancoms which i think will appeal to anyone and the friendship dynamics are realistic and sweet.
This book tackled some difficult topics but did so tastefully and respectfully.

I enjoyed this immensely and recommend to all.

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