The Sun Is Also A Star: Pages 1 to 50 – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
We begin The Sun Is Also A Star, learning about our leads and their families, alongside random people who’ll likely be cut from the movie.
In the Young Adult tag, you’ll find coming-of-age stories and productions featuring those in their late teens through twenties getting their lives together.
We begin The Sun Is Also A Star, learning about our leads and their families, alongside random people who’ll likely be cut from the movie.
Five Feet Apart not only delivers the expected tears but the kind of performances which legitimize the YA genre beyond predecessors.
While compared to The End of The F***ing World, Wayne proves itself to be more than a distant, working class, American cousin.
Wayne may very well be the first show that makes you want to have YouTube Premium.
Sex Education takes on the idea of being a teen sex comedy in ways you, surprisingly, may not have seen before.
Good Trouble, as The Fosters did, is charged with messages of equality mixed in with the relationship (platonic and otherwise) drama fans of its predecessor are used to.
Light as a Feather, thanks to the creepiness Haley Ramm brings, might become your new favorite Halloween fix.
The Hate U Give is the type of book which could prevent many from ever having the ability to say, “I don’t like to read.”
Outside of two moments in which the lead is sexually assaulted, and the protagonist being Black, The Darkest Minds is as generic as they come.
Leah on the Offbeat fills in a lot of the gaps and questions about Simon’s best friend Leah, as well as bring readers some bi-sexual representation.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.