To All The Boys I Loved Before Analysis

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To All The Boys I Loved Before is the beginning book in a two book series written by Jenny Hann. This novel is in the romance division mainly angled to teenage girls. Hann also wrote The Summer I Turned Pretty, It’s Not Summer Without You, and We’ll Always Have Summer. All three of those paperbacks including To All The Boys I Loved Before are New York Times Best Selling Books. To All The Boys I Loved Before is about a girl that is half Korean and half caucasian named Lara Jean. Lara Jean is a sixteen year old girl that writes letters to all the males she ever loved. One day her letters mistakenly get mailed out to all of the boys and she is stuck cleaning up the mess.
To start off, Lara Jean has three sisters named Margot, and Kitty which is short for Katherine. Lara Jean has a father, but we are never exposed to his name and her mother passed away. Margot is the first born child, going off to college in Scotland, and is the most realistic of them all. “Margot doesn’t see the point in wondering. This is our life; there’s no use in asking what if. No one could ever give you the answers” (10). Margot doesn’t like to imagine what could of happened or what would of happened because she is very practical and doesn’t see …show more content…

In To All The Boys I Loved Before Lara Jean didn’t want to fall in love with Peter but she did in the end. In The Selection America never planed to fall fond of Prince Maxon but she did. I think this book does reference universal themes because no matter where you live, you will fall in love and I think this book does an unquestionably fabulous job representing that and having emotions for and with the characters. When Lara Jean feels depressed because Peter broke her heart, or when she feels tense because all the boys got her letters you feel the same way. It feels like you are attached to the character emotionally of

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