You just can’t go wrong with free usually but I must admit that I remember hearing about the Ivy series a few years ago and it left me a bit cold. I didn’t go to Harvard and my college years were pretty good if not a bit Midwest Boring (not a lot of rock & roll, drugs or big city craziness) but good. But I’ve heard this is a fun read and should be appealing to younger people who are still finding themselves and navigating life. I’m usually OK with the choices I’ve made .. not ecstatic but OK and since I don’t have a time machine I can’t change the past even if I wanted too. Not that I’m stagnate since I’m pursuing a new career direction full speed, am working on getting in shape and being confidant as a grown woman ‘of a certain age’. As well as dating .. STILL urghh but that is what life is. Life doesn’t pay any attention to our plans and fate does have a hand in what path we eventually find ourselves.
Free Fridays: The Ivy
by JeremyCesarec 10 hours ago
Categories: Free Fridays
After reading today’s Free Fridays selection, The Ivy by Lauren Kunze and Rina Onur, you may actually be glad you didn’t get into Harvard.
This fun Young Adult novel, written by two friends who met at Harvard, follows the trials and travails of freshman Callie Andrews. She’s just arrived on campus, straight from California, and quickly finds that Cambridge brings a whole new set of challenges.
Anyone who’s made some school-age mistakes will sympathize with Callie’s string of bad luck—boy trouble, social miscues, getting on the wrong side of the school paper’s star reporter. But her three supportive roommates are a constant reminder that college—no matter how prestigious the school—is a time for making lifelong friends who help you forget those dumb decisions, and move on to the next challenge along the road to graduation.
Three more books in The Ivy series follow this adventure in higher learning.
Free Fridays Recommends
Each week, we ask our featured author to recommend a book or author that you may want to check out. Since authors are such passionate readers themselves, we thought you might like to find out what they love to read, too! Here’s what Lauren recommends:
Lately, as I work on a science fiction project of my own, I’ve been thinking a lot about my childhood favorite, Ender’s Game: the story of a young genius chosen to attend an elite military academy and defend the world against imminent destruction. This is science fiction at its most accessible, and I would urge everyone—particularly young women who think they’re not necessarily fans of the genre—to pick it up and give it a try. I actually cracked the spine of my old copy: a form of unparalleled praise that can only result from countless rereading. Obviously, I’ve found much to admire in Ender over the years, but today the read feels particularly refreshing for its third-person narration: Card conveys Ender’s interior struggles and astounding empathy while at the same time firmly holding him hostage in the machinations of the adult, military world. So, no matter your age or attitude toward science fiction—and especially to teens weary of today’s ever-popular first-person narrators and love triangles—I can’t recommend this one enough!
About Author
I live in Los Angeles and am a professional in the new media communication and marketing field with experience in non-profit, education, healthcare, political campaign and volunteer management. I’m a trustworthy honest creative professional that is able to offer strategic counseling on marketing & communications using social media.
In my spare time I enjoy cultural events, going to the movies, being a foodie, getting in shape and dating.