![]() ![]() ![]() I do think the major improvement from Love Hypothesis to Love on the Brain is the side characters. All of the interactions are very well written. To the Reviewīee’s sister, work relationships and omg the dynamic with Levi is AMAZING. I read this book in one sitting and then immediately read it again. (#winning ) Ali Hazelwood has gotten even better with her writing, and I didn’t think that was possible. I admit I went in with high expectations on this book and ALI DELIVERED. ![]() Love on the Brain comes out Augand is a standalone novel. In the case of Love on the Brain, our main character, Bee, is in Neuroengineering. STEM stands for Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math. Her books revolve around main women characters that are in the STEM field. In case you missed the amazingness of Ali’s first book The Love Hypothesis, the review is here. Ali Hazelwood has stolen my heart again with Love on the Brain Mini Rundown ![]()
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![]() ![]() ![]() The roster of characters is impressively reimagined, from Goldilocks as an angry protest songwriter to Cinderella’s sidekick Reynard the Fox, and Bigby the drunk wolf (who memorably grumbles how “cross-species hanky-panky just isn’t for me”). Cinderella, envisioned here as a smart-talking and Buffy-esque ass-kicker, is called in to head the investigation. It’s a mystery narrated by the Magic Mirror, who-along with the fey, fierce little Barleycorn girls and a hundred-plus talking wooden heads-is trying to suss out who just stole a magic car and why it looks like somebody is trying to kill all the fairest women in the land. The ever-expanding universe of Willingham’s Fables gets a juicy new addition with this standalone offshoot graphic novel from the Fairest series. ![]() ![]() ![]()
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