The Impossible Vastness of US
by Samantha Young
Harlequin Teen 360 pp.

One new girl. One posse. One school. One new family. One hot and mysterious boy. India’s life had previously been full of imperfections, but she had finally found her safe spot at the top of social ladder. Her absent mother, Haley, pulled her from her safe zone, and thrust her into a new school in Boston. Everything India had worked so hard to build up had been torn down by her mother and her marriage to a rich man. India said goodbye to California and her old lifestyle as she was shipped off to Boston where she entered a new life of name brand clothes and and new relationships. Her step sister hated her, and she couldn’t trust her new stepfather. The book portrays India’s development as a character shown in her secret relationship.
India learns to put others before herself, even if it means hurting herself in the process. In many stories like this the teenagers in love end up together. Though the relationship is full of love and passion, the characters realize the benefit of their separation, and take this into consideration looking at the future of their relationship. This new take on teenagers’ relationship is refreshing because by the end of the book there is both happiness and heartbreak, and the author found a way to mix the two opposing emotions together in a comforting way.

The Impossible Vastness of Us comes out June 27, 2017. This is an ARC review.

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