
Reserve it at BN.com & pick it up in 60 minutes at your local store.
Enter a zip code
(Paperback - Reprint)
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| Hardcover | $17.09 |
Reminiscent of the movie Say Anything, a debut novel for all those searching for The One!
Sara and Tobey couldn't be more different. She is focused on getting into her first-choice college; he wants to win Battle of the Bands. Sara's other goal is to find true love, so when Dave, a popular jock, asks her out, she's thrilled. But then there's Tobey. His amazing blue eyes and quirky wit always creep into her thoughts. It just so happens that one of Tobey's goals is also to make Sara fall in love with him. Told in alternating points of view, Sara and Tobey's real connection will have everyone rooting for them from the minute they meet!
In Colasanti's sweet debut, an unlikely pair of high school seniors fall for each other, and learn to handle the ups and downs that come with love. At the start of the book, overachiever Sara starts dating popular Dave, mainly because "after being a nobody for so long, it feels awesome to be a somebody." But when she gets paired up with smart slacker musician Tobey, they instantly connect and Sara realizes true love is "finally happening." Told through the couple's alternating perspectives, the story realistically captures the thrill of first love (Sara realizes that "When I'm with Tobey, an hour seems like a second"). After finding each other, Sara and Tobey must deal with jealous exes as well as their futures (Tobey learns to study, hoping to go to the Manhattan Music Academy and be near Sara at NYU). Readers may find the plot somewhat thin, and secondary story lines remain underdeveloped (e.g., Sara's strained relationship with her mother, who was 16 when Sara was born; her friend Maggie's struggles to deal with her parents' divorce). But the book emulates the feeling that everything but the budding romance slips to the background. Even the delectably hokey scene in which Tobey wins Sara back by standing under her window, holding up his boom box over his head (like John Cusack in her favorite scene from Say Anything) is sure to make readers smile. Ages 12-up. (May) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsSusane Colasanti lives in New York City.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
November 02, 2009: Very sweet story about a boy and a girl. Boy pines for Girl but Girl is pining/with someone else. Sara is dating Dave, this popular boy and she's created him to be someone he probably is not. Then there's Tobey, somewhat of a slacker of sorts who falls for Sara and wants to prove to her that Dave is not the guy he makes himself out to be. It's a sweet book and easy to read. Good for a rainy day.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
October 25, 2009: When It Happens went from boring and lame, to okay, and then back to boring and lame. In the first few pages, Sara talks about wanting to be popular. Whenever characters in books do this, I just get so freakin' annoyed. So, I didn't like her from the start. Tobey was okay. Nothin' special. The book started to become okay when Tobey was trying to win Sara over. But then, when Sara "sees Tobey for the first time" and is somehow in love with him, it went right back to boring and lame. Susane Colasanti's writing was laughable and unprofessional. She was trying to make the characters sound like teenagers, but it was way too forced. I wish I didn't read When It Happens. It was a total waste.
I Also Recommend: Wuthering Heights.