Happily Ever After 
But life has a funny way of catching us unawares. Turns out that Elle doesn't know everything about love. Or life. Or how to keep the ones we love safe...
Absorbing, poignant, and unforgettable, Happily Ever After is a compelling story of a fractured family and a girl who doesn't believe in love.
It took me a while to get into, but I found it to be very compelling. I was afraid at first that it was another "adorable awkward young thing gets job, falls in love" standard holiday read, but I forgot how much raw love and pain and emotion that Harriey Evans is able to conjure up. Very wistful and enjoyable, and sometimes shocking and painful. Would recommend for a reader looking for something nostalgic and full of drama, especially for women who themselves are readers. Much better than the
i've made it to page 117 but i'm stopping reading because i don't feel like it's going anywhere. It keeps skipping years and leaving me confused and wanting to know what happened after something but not getting to find out and instead left with boring other parts.I first picked up this book because of the title, i thought it may have been said ironically and that it wasn't actually going to be a happily ever after but after reading the blurb i quite liked elle's opinion on no happy ending.I also
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I was really actually disappointed in this book. Which killed me because I LOVE all the other Harriet Evans Novels. This story just jumped around far to much throughout the years. I never felt a connection with the main character, found her kind of annoying actually. And didn't even see her connection with main love interest. There was no real plot in the story except that you follow this girl through the years. Which would of been fine expect she is also kind of boring. Love, Always and The
To say I read this book on a whim of sorts is an understatement. When I first read the title, Happily Ever After that was almost enough for me to put it back but something about the cover art, a girl standing in front of a bookshop in London, my heart just had to have it. I saw a little of myself in that cover, having done the very some thing when I found the bookshop from Notting Hill (1999) with Julia Roberts and Hugh Grant, I just stood there and stared. Anyway, back to the bookIt follows a
I started off actually liking this well enough, as the set-up was very powerful. I particularly enjoyed Elles difficult relationship with her brother that scene at the start when theyre children is simply brilliant. Sadly, we dont stay in this childhood moment as were quickly tumbled into Elle as a young woman trying to make her way in the publishing world.Entirely due to the great start, I was prepared to give Elle the benefit of the doubt and kept my determination going for a good 100 pages
This is the third book by Harriet Evans I've read in the past few weeks after discovering The Love of Her Life at the library used book sale for a quarter, and then borrowing A Hopeless Romantic from the library soon after. Her books clearly have a formula--young woman unhappy in love, meets a new man, doesn't trust herself, runs away (often to New York), focuses on work and improves herself, former love returns, and happy ending ensues. This must be a compelling formula for thirty-somethings,
Harriet Evans
Paperback | Pages: 468 pages Rating: 3.5 | 3162 Users | 368 Reviews
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Be Specific About Books Conducive To Happily Ever After
Original Title: | Happily Ever After |
ISBN: | 0007350279 (ISBN13: 9780007350278) |
Edition Language: |
Interpretation Toward Books Happily Ever After
This is a story of a girl who doesn't believe in happy endings. Or happy families. It's the story of Eleanor Bee, a shy book-loving girl who vows to turn herself into someone bright, shiny, and confident, someone sophisticated. Someone who knows how life works.But life has a funny way of catching us unawares. Turns out that Elle doesn't know everything about love. Or life. Or how to keep the ones we love safe...
Absorbing, poignant, and unforgettable, Happily Ever After is a compelling story of a fractured family and a girl who doesn't believe in love.
Mention Appertaining To Books Happily Ever After
Title | : | Happily Ever After |
Author | : | Harriet Evans |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 468 pages |
Published | : | August 16th 2012 by Harper (first published 2012) |
Categories | : | Womens Fiction. Chick Lit. Romance. Fiction. Contemporary |
Rating Appertaining To Books Happily Ever After
Ratings: 3.5 From 3162 Users | 368 ReviewsDiscuss Appertaining To Books Happily Ever After
The choices we makes in the past haunt us forever Harriet Evans has established herself as a leading author of women's literature. The British writer has already published several books that touch upon the themes of the modern woman's struggle with relationships and love. While this genre is certainly covered by many other authors, Evans is without doubt original and refreshing with her formula-free tales. In Happily Ever After Evans brings us a new story about the perils of being young andIt took me a while to get into, but I found it to be very compelling. I was afraid at first that it was another "adorable awkward young thing gets job, falls in love" standard holiday read, but I forgot how much raw love and pain and emotion that Harriey Evans is able to conjure up. Very wistful and enjoyable, and sometimes shocking and painful. Would recommend for a reader looking for something nostalgic and full of drama, especially for women who themselves are readers. Much better than the
i've made it to page 117 but i'm stopping reading because i don't feel like it's going anywhere. It keeps skipping years and leaving me confused and wanting to know what happened after something but not getting to find out and instead left with boring other parts.I first picked up this book because of the title, i thought it may have been said ironically and that it wasn't actually going to be a happily ever after but after reading the blurb i quite liked elle's opinion on no happy ending.I also

I was really actually disappointed in this book. Which killed me because I LOVE all the other Harriet Evans Novels. This story just jumped around far to much throughout the years. I never felt a connection with the main character, found her kind of annoying actually. And didn't even see her connection with main love interest. There was no real plot in the story except that you follow this girl through the years. Which would of been fine expect she is also kind of boring. Love, Always and The
To say I read this book on a whim of sorts is an understatement. When I first read the title, Happily Ever After that was almost enough for me to put it back but something about the cover art, a girl standing in front of a bookshop in London, my heart just had to have it. I saw a little of myself in that cover, having done the very some thing when I found the bookshop from Notting Hill (1999) with Julia Roberts and Hugh Grant, I just stood there and stared. Anyway, back to the bookIt follows a
I started off actually liking this well enough, as the set-up was very powerful. I particularly enjoyed Elles difficult relationship with her brother that scene at the start when theyre children is simply brilliant. Sadly, we dont stay in this childhood moment as were quickly tumbled into Elle as a young woman trying to make her way in the publishing world.Entirely due to the great start, I was prepared to give Elle the benefit of the doubt and kept my determination going for a good 100 pages
This is the third book by Harriet Evans I've read in the past few weeks after discovering The Love of Her Life at the library used book sale for a quarter, and then borrowing A Hopeless Romantic from the library soon after. Her books clearly have a formula--young woman unhappy in love, meets a new man, doesn't trust herself, runs away (often to New York), focuses on work and improves herself, former love returns, and happy ending ensues. This must be a compelling formula for thirty-somethings,
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