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It took me a little bit to love this book as much as I loved One Last Stop, but god do I love this book. This is everything I wish my high school experience could have been, and everything Im still looking for now. There is so much love in this book, in all its forms, and it is so incredibly smart and funny. I don’t think I’ll ever stop loving CMQ’s books.

Enormous thanks to netgalley and the publisher for sending me an advanced copy of this book.

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I loved this book. Honestly, it felt like a whole season of a TV show in one. I got Pretty Little Liars vibes (but better) through the first half of the story and couldn't have loved it more. My review is a rambling mess, but did I mention I loved this book?!

I love the diverse cast and LGBTQIA+ representation. It also gave a look at religious trauma that can happen to LGBTQIA+ folks inside of some Christian organizations. I seriously applaud the author for tackling so many real issues in a way that still highlights the beautiful characters. It's also PERFECT for YA (high school+) fans and makes love accessible to all.

Both of McQuiston's latest books (One Last Stop and I Kissed Shara Wheeler) created worlds of characters that I long to be a part of. Although there is conflict and struggle to find identity, the characters develop in a way that shows readers that they are perfect as they are and that they don't need to hide parts of themselves to be loved.

This is a book I needed when I was 16. I feel lucky to have gotten to read it now.

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Honestly, not my favorite book by this author. I feel like it was trying to be Gilmore girls and a John green novel. It was disappointing only because red white and royal blue and one last stop were so original and this one just wasn’t. Fell flat for me.

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This was my favorite of McQuiston’s romances. There was a scavenger hunt/caper, a romance, some self discovery, but also some serious issues covered.

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McQuiston keeps killing it! I couldn’t put down this wonderful coming of age book with loveable and hilarious characters. I loved the found family themes and mystery plot. A lot of fun B-movie tropes and twists and turns which had me laughing!

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<b>Thank you St. Martin's Press and Wednesday Books for providing me with an e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.</b>

Although I often see Casey McQuiston's books lumped into the YA category (they are most definitely new adult!), <i>I Kissed Shara Wheeler</i> is McQuiston's first young adult novel. It is a contemporary high school mystery set in religious, academically competitive town. Chloe and golden girl Shara have been in a high-strung battle to win the valedictorian title--until Shara goes missing, with nothing but a series of clever clues left behind.

Casey McQuiston is fantastic at writing witty dialogue, distinct characters, and vivid scenes. Right from the beginning when the mystery is introduced, it's obvious that this was a carefully planned novel. Even though the beginning started out great--a mystery! with little clues! from the perfect, oh so beautiful Shara Wheeler! complete with a gang of lovable clue-hunting side characters! woo!--I was really struggling to stay interested in the mystery. I found myself devouring the beginning and end of the book, but unable to read more than a few chapters at a time of the middle without getting bored. Even though ideally books should hold your attention for the duration of the entire novel, eh, sometimes it happens. Sometimes you get a little bored. It's cool. It can happen often in realistic fiction contemporaries. However, for a mystery novel, I should be wanting to speed through the pages to solve the clues. I should be hypothesizing, gasping, and trying to solve the mystery along with the characters. Not wanting to quit in the middle of the book because I'm unsure why the characters are even invested in the clues in the first place.

And that was my other problem. The characters. Our main character Chloe and her rival Shara were unbearable. I hate calling female YA protagonists annoying, but they were repetitive and a bit selfish, with maybe only a few redeeming qualities towards the end that were not redeeming enough. This was a perfect example of a book where I cared very little about the main characters and very much wanted a story about the side characters. I was having a hard time understanding why the characters felt so compelled to follow the clues about Shara Wheeler's disappearance. Y'all!!! If I was in this book, I'd simply not care. I would say "oh no, I hope they find her!" and move on. I'm sorry.

I don't want to put spoilers in this review, so I'll be vague, but I also wasn't entirely a fan of the way things wrapped up, regarding the characters emotions and explanations. Nothing felt satisfying, convincing, or worth it.

Despite all my complaints, I didn't hate <i>I Kissed Shara Wheeler</i>. It was fine. Mediocre, yes, but fine. Just a typical YA contemporary. I would say go for it if you're interested in reading it, but don't expect anything groundbreaking.

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Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Casey McQuiston is quickly becoming one of my auto-buy authors. Like… oh, they have a new book out? Say no more, I don’t even need to know the plot, I am SOLD.

This book absolutely did not disappoint. It was a fun ride that made several good points and left me happy crying at the end.

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Loved it! I had high hopes and it didn’t disappoint. It was charming, heartfelt and funny. It felt fresh and familiar at the same time and I can’t wait to read it again.

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Casey McQuiston is fast becoming an auto-buy author for me, after I devoured "Red, White & Royal Blue," "One Last Stop," and now, "I Kissed Shara Wheeler." While much of this read is less of a true-blue romantic comedy and more of an adventure/mystery, I enjoyed it nonetheless. After popular student Shara Wheeler kisses her boyfriend Smith, bad-boy neighbor Rory and academic rival Chloe, she takes off -- leaving a series of pink-colored envelopes full of intricate clues for the unlikely trio to decode before they can find her location. This book gives me a "Paper Towns" by John Green vibe, as most of the book, Smith/Rory/Chloe team up as amateur sleuths in their small Alabama town in time for their high school graduation.

True to style, McQuiston weaves her signature compelling, witty language to tell an engaging story full of diverse and authentic characters. By early chapters, I'm already so intrigued to learn more and find out what actually happened! This book is that unputdownable, truly, and adds a unique twist on the rom-com genre thanks to the added 'Where is Shara' mystery we have going on here. Main character Chloe Green, just like the side characters, is so authentic, honest and relatable as they all come of age in a small Southern town. All in all, this book is so, so, so good and intriguing, like I just loved it. Then, it does feature a cute rom-com and HEA, not just for our heroine but also the whole senior class too, which is equally sweet and cute.

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I think CMQ is a master in writing very relatable queer characters and creating a world that's not idyllically perfect but where these characters learn or manage to thrive no matter what the world throws at them. They're always surrounded by a solid found family of queer characters and they have a very solid support system they can rely on if they ever need it. And that's one of the reasons I love their books so much and why this isn't an exception.

Shara Wheeler kissed three people and then she disappeared. Our MC, Chloe, disaster bi, A+ student, rebel, is one of the one she kissed and this will start a chain of events that Chloe wasn't expecting to be part of that close to graduation. She wants to beat Shara at being valedictorian, she wants to go to NYU with her best friend, and she definitely doesn't want to chase after Shara, who she appears to hate even more now that she disappeared.

Shara leaves a trail of clues written in pink notes that will bring together Chloe, Shara's boyfriend and super sweet cinnamon roll Smith, and bad boy Rory. The three unlikely friends will have to join forces to uncover Shara's secrets and find out why she vanished and where she is. But nothing is as it seems and they will find out sooner rather than later, with consequences none of them saw coming.

Saying that I loved this, is not enough. Chloe lets herself outside her comfort zone for a girl she barely knows, and that alone is ground breaking, but she also learns a lot about herself and about the others she so easily cast in certain roles maybe they didn't deserve and they didn't fit into.

The city where this takes place is a very christian city, and the private school they go to, is much stricter in its rules than it needs to be. It forces these kids to repress who they are, it makes them feel unsafe to be, to live. I loved seeing how Chloe saw the town at first and how she saw it throughout the events of the book.

This book will be important to many young people living in similar situations and will make them feel seen. I might not be a teen anymore, and I might have gone to school in the US, but a lot of passages in the book went straight to my heart and I might have shed a tear or two.

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Wow, days after finishing I’m still feeling big feelings over this story. I grew up in the deep south and spent formative years in an evangelical Christian church, and this book keenly observes all the particular awfulness of that context but in a way that was healing for me to read and process.

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I adored McQuiston's other two books so much (SO MUCH!), so I was thrilled when I was able to download an ARC!!

McQuiston is compulsively readable as ever in this book. Their wit is still razor-sharp, and their amazing ability to capture and imbue her stories with the zeitgeist (I hate that word so much, I'n sorry) of a generation is present and keen. I enjoyed this book, but it didn't blow me out of the water or enchant me as much as OLS or RWARB.

I spent the first fifty percent of the book pissed off at how manipulative Shara Wheeler seemed, and then I spent the next thirty percent exasperated at Chloe when I realized what was going on, but by the end, McQuiston guides the reader to a resolution that makes you re-think what is going with both characters, like shifting a piece of art into a different light. I saw both Chloe and Shara as different characters than their initial first impressions by the end, and I think that shift in itself is a work of an incredible feat of craft. Their writing is poetic and lucid as it always is. I think this book will be incredibly iconic for many people, much like other American coming of age narratives like The Breakfast Club, Mean Girl, or Sixteen Candles, but with from a queer, contemporary perspective that many will relate to.

The cast of characters is brilliant in this book, my favorite individuals being Ace, Chloe's moms, and Smith. <3 I appreciated that both Shara and Chloe were messy, fierce characters, and they do make sense how much they fit each other.

This book is ultimately a coming-of-age novel about grappling with queer identity growing up in the Bible Belt. Please regard the content warning the author provides at the beginning.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/4415132555?book_show_action=false&from_review_page=1

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Great read, interesting storyline. Although I didn’t develop a connection with the main character, it didn’t mar my reading experience in the least.
I’m always interested in an author’s move into a different audience, in this case to YA. Pretty seamless, and I’m intrigued to keep reading more. In particular, more about the moms, please!! I adored their characters, relationship, and hope to get to know them better (I can’t possibly be the only one!)
Highly readable and recommended.
Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC!

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This is like a better, gayer, more fulfilling Paper Towns and I was not mad about it. I think it's important to go into this without trying to classify it as a romance though. Casey wrote one of my favourite romances of all time (RWARB) and I think this book is more about self-discovery and learning how to not let high school consume you than it is about romance. Does it have romance? Absolutely. Is it the primary focus? It is not. HOWEVER, it is a rivals to lovers so we can't help but love it.

Did I like it? I did. Did it beat out RWARB? It did not. Is it an excellent debut into the YA world? Absolutely.

Chloe's entire time in Willowgrove Christian Academy has been spent competing with the only person who could give her a run for her money. Chloe is smart and works hard, but so is the adored Shara Wheeler. The world loves her, and she soaks it all up... so why is it that the day after her surprise kiss with Chloe she takes off, leaving a scavenger hunt in her wake.

Shara has effectively shaken up Chloe's world, throwing her into a detective mission with Rory, Shara's best friend, and Smith, Shara's boyfriend. Three people whose most recent commonality is the fact that all three have shared a kiss with Shara before she up and left.

It's a month before graduation, a month before Chloe were to get valedictorian, and Chloe can't believe that this infuriating girl has chosen now as the time to make a scene. No one seems to be alarmed, including the Wheeler's, so Chloe's curiosity gets the best of her (and Rory and Smith) and the three follow the clues to try and find her.

The more letters they receive, the more is revealed about perfect Shara and as it turns out, she's not quite so perfect. Suddenly the illusion is shattered and Chloe feels validated in her initial impression of the girl who has both pushed her to do better in school and also been the reason she's wanted to pull her hair out. It's not enough and Chloe's fixation on good grades shifts to finding Shara and dragging her back to the Academy so she can beat her the right way and not because Shara's given up.

Shara's disappearance and game of hide-and-seek bring Chloe to the doorsteps of many classmates she'd otherwise not have spoken to. The more she's out hunting down Wheeler, the more experiences she becomes a part of that she'd managed to avoid since she got there.

One thing I adore about Casey's writing style is the way she writes character interactions. My favourites in her past two books have been the banter with the main character and the secondary characters because it's so playful and witty. I'm always thoroughly entertained by the way they all bounce off of each other and it makes me love the book so much more. I think I've been looking for Alex and Henry-esque characters in our leads but I'm finding them more in the background now and I think the shift being unexpected resulted in it taking longer for me to adjust.

Basically, TLDR; I like the friendships Casey writes A LOT.

I loved the overall story but I think what made me truly love this book was all the little side stories that ended up being huge journies of self-discovery for our supporting characters. I'd argue that they would, in some way, be the main characters of the same book. Smith and Rory were WONDERFUL. Ace too and I genuinely did not see him coming. High school is such a suffocating environment and to go to a hardcover Christian, Bible-thumping school is basically waterboarding yourself. Our characters find their own opportunities to express themselves in the best ways that they could. This book had so much love and appreciation for being queer that it's hard not to admire. No one was ashamed. So many characters were just being smothered by the world around them but when they learned about what was going on inside them, the acceptance was beautiful.

I'd love to get into the end and the illusions of Shara Wheeler but I think that's best left to the reader on their own accord. Read the book and we can circle back and talk about it.

I think this will be a book to hold onto. I think that high schools should take notes and try their best to do exactly the opposite of what this school does.

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There were a lot of things that I liked about this book. I thought the mystery of Chloe trying to find out what happened to Shara was exciting. The way Shara left all of those notes and how she planned her disappearance was really intriguing. I also liked the way the characters came together in the end, all getting a version of their own HEAs. Casey McQuiston does an amazing job of writing found families and is inclusive in her representation. I was rooting for all of them to find their happiness and I was glad Chloe and her friends found happiness.

There is a reason why I don't normally gravitate towards young adult books. The characters in this book were self-absorbed and immature. They could have avoided all that conflict if they just communicated with one another. I acknowledge that this is how teens act in real life but I get annoyed with these kinds of stories sometimes. I thought maybe because I like McQuiston's writing so much that I could enjoy this one more, but I didn't. I also thought the big reveal of what happened to Shara anticlimactic.

This could very well be a case of "it's not you, it's me." I think young adult novel fans could really like this one!

⚠️: homophobia/queerphobia, sexual harassment

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Imagine a CW version of Nancy Drew, make everyone queer, and you'll have an approximation of the experience of reading I Kissed Shara Wheeler. Casey McQuiston is queen of my heart, and I was excited to see how she would translate her adult-oriented horny escapism to a YA audience. The good news is that the best parts of McQuiston's earlier works show up here as well, including the queer community, pop culture references, and precisely balanced angst. The bad news: I read the entire book in a day and now I don't know what to do with myself.

Chloe Green has spent her entire high school career competing against inexplicably brilliant blond prom queen Shara Wheeler for the title of valedictorian. When Shara kisses her in an elevator and disappears, leaving nothing but an intricately plotted trail of clues left on pink stationary, Chloe gets drawn further and further into the mystery of Shara's true identity. Along the way, she befriends a gentle football player and sensitive stoner, learns that she's not the only one who has felt out of place at her conservative Christian school, and inadvertently stages a school-wide protest. Also, everyone is gay, and that's very fun. My favorite part of I Kissed Shara Wheeler is the way the teen characters are figuring themselves out at the same time the reader is. I think a lot of young readers will see themselves in at least one of McQuiston's characters, and the novel as a whole feels inclusive and supportive without being preachy. I will admit that for much of the story I was less excited about the central mystery: Shara Wheeler doesn't become a real person until the end of the book, and while I eventually came to appreciate Chloe's fascination with her, I imagine some readers might not. Know that there's plenty of sweet queer romance and friendship in here even if you don't end up loving the Mean Girls vibe of the mystery notes.

Finally, even if this book was garbage (it's not, it's great), I would still recommend it based solely on its incredible portrayal of queer parenthood. Chloe's moms are funny, fierce, and perfect, and more than I want a sequel of I Kissed Shara Wheeler I want a prequel where they meet and fall in love. (But also, a I want a sequel of I Kissed Shara Wheeler. Why not both?)

Thank you to St. Martin's Press and NetGalley for the ARC!

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All the classic YA hallmarks with a new cast of characters.

It's no secret that I have been a megafan of McQuiston since reading an ARC of Red, White, & Royal Blue. This is their first attempt at YA, and while it's my least favorite of their catalog, it's still very solid.

The biggest difference here is I didn't feel IKSW was nearly as original as the author's previous works. It's a very tropey last month of high school romcom.filled with characters that are misfits of all kinds. But I think that's actually the point of the book: to show that queer kids have and deserve all the John Hughes moments straight kids have gotten forever.

Given that it's McQuiston's first attempt at YA, I can tell they are still figuring out how to calibrate from adult novels. I felt the humor wasn't quite as sharp and fast as I've come to love, but overall, if you know a kid graduating from high school this spring you would do well to gift them this book.

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Someday, Casey McQuiston is going to write a book that doesn’t immediately pull me in with the main characters, but then make me fall in love with all the side characters just as much.

I can happily report that this isn’t that day.

Folks, McQuiston has done it again, this time with a YA mystery. It follows Chloe Green, a Los Angeles transplant living in the very conservative and very religious town of Willowgrove.

Her goal? To win valedictorian, to really show all those Willowgrove students that she’s above them.

Her rival? The principal’s daughter Shara Wheeler.

The problem? Shara goes missing after prom.

But Shara chooses to go missing. And she left clues for the three people she last kissed before vanishing. One kiss to her football playing boyfriend, one kiss to the Bad Boy next door, and one, much to the chagrin of our main character, to Chloe Green. Now, these three have to follow the trail of clues to find out where Shara went and why Shara left.

Like I said earlier, the cast of characters in this is delightful in the way that McQuiston is a master of creating. Smith and Rory, the football player and neighbor (respectively), help to make up the trio seeking out Shara’s location. The queer characters in here learn about themselves and how they fit into the mostly aggressively homophobic world they’ve been in their whole lives.

And then there’s Chloe and Shara. Tomes could be written on Chloe and Shara, and I imagine they will be.

This is a really strong YA debut for McQuiston and it was fun seeing them play in the space. They’re currently at 3/3 with hits.

5/5 stars.

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I really enjoyed this book and I found it to be a good, diverse YA novel. I did not connect well to the main character, she was almost annoying in some examples, but her arc was well developed, and by the end of it I was rooting for her! the antagonist (if you can call her that) was really interesting and super compelling but also almost annoying. I would recommend it and I think the author did a really good job with their entrance into YA.

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This book was so, so good! McQuiston shifts into YA seamlessly with Shara Wheeler. On its surface, this book is about a popular girl who disappears, and her admirers and friends have to follow a series of clues in order to find her. Beyond that, however, is a story that considers gender with more thoughtfulness than I've maybe ever seen; a story that shows how competition and lust can intertwine in the best ways; and a story about the twisting of religion that stifles identity. It's a true gem, a delight to read, and I can't wait to everyone else to get their hands on it!

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