Friday, April 17, 2015

5 stars for True Love Way


SYNOPSIS
Some days are brighter than others, but Penelope Finnel has been taught she can be invisible behind the colored lenses of her heart-shaped sunglasses.

Her mind is her worst enemy, and simply waking up in the morning is risky. For a kid like her, staying in bed is easier, especially when the day has come to start school in a new town with new kids who don’t understand that the clouds are not the only reason everything is so gloomy.

Dillon Decker is a typical boy from a typical small town who radiates light and happiness. Under the hovering glare from her father, Dillon leads Penelope around on his bicycle’s handlebars, hoping he is the cure to her madness.

But when friend turns to lover, and lover turns to caretaker, how much can either of them tolerate before they’re swallowed whole?

A story about moving trucks and rollerblades, candy for smiles, and notes across lawns.

First loves and the struggle to keep it sane.


The true love way.   


CHRISTY'S REVIEW

True Love WayTrue Love Way by Mary  Elizabeth
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

5 ‘Candy for smiles’ stars!


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True Love Way is a story of a first love, a true love, a once in a lifetime love. A love you would fight for, sacrifice for and do anything to keep. This, my friends, is an epic love story.

When Dillion Decker is just 12 years old, his entire life is changed forever. One moving truck next door. One glance at the girl his age wearing sunglasses and blowing bubbles. He’s a goner. This girl is something else. Her name is Penelope Finnel, and she is his new best friend.
 
Since the day she and her family moved into the house beside mine, I’ve become obsessed with Penelope Finnel.

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As the years go by, Penelope and Dillion are together constantly. Dillion learns something about Penelope. She is often sad. Not just a little sad like everyone gets, her sadness is so strong that sometimes it’s debilitating. Sometimes, she can hardly get out of bed or function. Written in dual pov, you get to really see what’s going on with Pen. I thought that was so important. Going through her head when she’s going through this.

Dillion does anything and everything he can for his best friend. To make her smile. It’s his job to make her laugh, to keep her in the light and happy. He loves her, he’ll do anything for her, but as time goes on, Dillion realizes he can and will do anything for Pen, but he can’t save her.

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“Dillion,” Penelope whispers.
“Sometimes I’m so sad.”
“That’s okay.”

“I don’t know how to fix it.” she admits.
Emotion pulls in her brown eyes.
“I’ll help you,” I say.



Dillion is more than devoted to Penelope. There is something to say about this type of love and devotion. Something so special about someone, anyone, but especially someone so young who gives so much. His love for her will move you. Inspire you. Dillion is such a special character. This boy will steal your heart.

Penelope is ill. She has a disease that she struggles with and no matter the treatment, it seems that it will be a lifelong struggle. Dillion loves her regardless. I loved Penelope’s character. I felt her pain while reading. I can’t imagine going through something so crippling. She was strong, and when she couldn’t be, Dillion was strong for her.

I loved the love they had for each other. I loved watching it go from friendship, to first loves, to true love.

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I fell in love with Mary Elizabeth’s poetic and lyrical writing style in Dusty. I love how this woman writes. Dillion and Penelope’s journey wasn’t always smooth sailing, but it was nowhere near as tumultuous or stressful as Dusty. There was a tad bit of angst, but it wasn’t long lasting or nearly as difficult to read. I think that this was a very smart move on the authors part. These characters have already been through so much.



I feel like I need to take a moment to shout out to Wayne, Penelope’s dad. He is just such a fantastic character. I love his candy payments and his relationship with Dillion. Dillion’s sister was also a fun character. She was a trip. I loved most all the characters in this book, but Dillion was by far my favorite. I love how he saw perfection in Penelope, flaws and all. He never gave up on her, no matter how difficult things got. He loves her completely and unconditionally.

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True Love Way is so much more than a story about best friends and first loves. It’s not always an easy story to read. It’s real, it’s raw, it’s genuine and all consuming. This story touched my heart. It made  me feel and stayed on my mind days after reading it. The ending, well, I only have one word for that ending. Perfection.

I think it’s so hard to cover a topic like this, and I feel like Mary Elizabeth did a perfect job or portraying extreme depression and what it’s like living with it day to day. The highs, the lows, the in-between. How it doesn’t just effect you, but everyone who loves you.

If your looking for a beautiful story that toes the line of YA/NA, with a hero that you will completely and utterly adore, a heroine with struggles- yet who works to overcome them, a story that will make you laugh, smile, cry and will move you, this is one I highly recommend.
 
   
“I love you like no other.”

 


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EXCERPT
My dad stares at me like I just told him there’s a dental theories’ seminar for nerd dentists like himself he wasn’t invited to.
No, better than that.
His face reminds me of that time he realized a grown man had stolen his lucky molar spreader from his office after an extraction and was forced to buy a new, unlucky one.
"Are you sure you’re ready?" Dad clears his throat, shutting the door so that Mom doesn’t hear our conversation.
Sex is natural, it happens, and it’s a part of becoming a man. Dad told me all of this when he was naming parts on a plastic uterus, and now he wants to know if I’m ready. I wasn’t ready for hair to grow on my balls, but that happened.
I wonder how many M&M’s Coach Finnel will give me if I make Pen smile during sex.
Those should count as double.
"Considering Penelope’s condition, Dillon, committing to a physical relationship with her isn’t very wise."
"She’s sad sometimes," I say, swallowing my anger. "Not dying."
Pulling the rolling chair out from behind his desk, he sits and takes his glasses off. Dad pinches the bridge of his nose before continuing. "There’s more to it than that, Dillon. Especially in children, and that’s exactly what the two of you are."
Excerpt Two:
We’re tangled limbs and naked skin, breathing heavily and touching curiously. My bare back stings under the summer sun, and her pale, undressed chest practically glows. A cage of stark white bone, red blood and muscle, and blue veins protect the fragile beating heart beneath. I brush my lips over the diamond-shaped collection of freckles at the base of her throat and push my knees up, opening hers around me.
She’s tired-wild and lifeless-living.
The dense wall of trees around us protects her from being seen, and the blanket over the grass keeps her comfortable. Far enough out into the woods, only the wildlife will hear her screams.
She’s all that matters and safe with me.
Sliding my hands up her thin stomach and over her round chest, my girl tilts her head back, and her brown eyes move under her translucent lids. Chapped lips part, and a sound so small escapes I don’t know if I heard it and question my own sanity.
"Are you sure this is what you want?" I ask, unbuttoning my shorts.
Penelope’s long lashes flutter, and she opens her eyes against sun rays so strong red blotches slowly appear on her outstretched arms. She has green blades of grass in her grip, holding on to Earth so she doesn’t fly away as I slowly push my fingers into her warmest spot.
My girl circles her hips over my hand, and I shove deeper, like either one of us knows what this really means.
Leaning over her small body, I kiss the length of Pen’s neck and pull her earlobe between my teeth.
"We can stop whenever you want," I say, licking the single tear that bleeds from the side of her eye.
"I don’t want to," insistence answers with a breathless voice.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR



Mary Elizabeth is an up and coming author who finds words in chaos, writing stories about the skeletons hanging in your closets. 

Known as The Realist, Mary was born and raised in Southern California. She is a wife, mother of four beautiful children, and dog tamer to one enthusiastic Pit Bull and a prissy Chihuahua. She's a hairstylist by day but contemporary fiction, new adult author by night. Mary can often be found finger twirling her hair and chewing on a stick of licorice while writing and rewriting a sentence over and over until it's perfect. She discovered her talent for tale-telling accidentally, but literature is in her chokehold. And she's not letting go until every story is told. 

"The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure."--Jeremiah 17:9

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