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A review by claaaiiirrreee
One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston
5.0
At this point... anything Casey McQuiston puts out, I'm preordering. And then devouring in one sitting. And then probably rating five stars.
Like with Red White & Royal Blue, One Last Stop showcases McQuiston's effortless ability to develop protagonists you care about, love interests who are fleshed out and fully realized, and a supporting cast you wouldn't mind an entire spinoff series about (seriously, call me when the Myla and Niko book comes out). In One Last Stop, I fell in love with Jane (big time), Myla, Niko, Wes and Isiah (and everyone at Billy's, and everyone at Delilah's, etc. etc.) right alongside August.
The romantic arc of this book has literally everything–time travel, missed connections, yearning, angst, spice, conflict, conflict resolution, and a soundtrack that won't quit. Jane Su is the impossible woman of my dreams, and it's so easy to see why August falls in love with her immediately. Their relationship is such a gorgeously written WLW love story and I'm so thrilled to see it out in the world.
My only real critique of the book is I could have used more Noodle the Poodle.
Like with Red White & Royal Blue, One Last Stop showcases McQuiston's effortless ability to develop protagonists you care about, love interests who are fleshed out and fully realized, and a supporting cast you wouldn't mind an entire spinoff series about (seriously, call me when the Myla and Niko book comes out). In One Last Stop, I fell in love with Jane (big time), Myla, Niko, Wes and Isiah (and everyone at Billy's, and everyone at Delilah's, etc. etc.) right alongside August.
The romantic arc of this book has literally everything–time travel, missed connections, yearning, angst, spice, conflict, conflict resolution, and a soundtrack that won't quit. Jane Su is the impossible woman of my dreams, and it's so easy to see why August falls in love with her immediately. Their relationship is such a gorgeously written WLW love story and I'm so thrilled to see it out in the world.
My only real critique of the book is I could have used more Noodle the Poodle.