


desertcart.com: One Last Stop: 9781839031892: McQuiston, Casey: Books Review: A love letter to the LGBTQ community...happy pride month! - I truly cannot express enough how much I loved this book. I enjoyed Red, White, and Royal Blue, and when I saw that Casey McQuiston had a new book coming out, I was excited, but One Last Stop far surpassed my already high expectations. This book is an absolute delight with an entire cast of characters to fall in love with, and a unique and creative plot that keeps you hooked. While the story and the romance are both wonderful and most certainly worth reading the book for, the thing that I found most enticing is the story it tells about queerness over the last fifty years. Jane, a 70s lesbian who lived and loved in a time where being gay was illegal, has been transplanted into the modern age by being stuck on a subway train. August is a Louisiana bisexual who moves to New York to reinvent herself away from her mother, whose obsession with finding her brother who's been missing since the 70s has stifled August and her own identity formation. August moves into an apartment shared by an electrical engineer-turned-artist, a real life psychic, and a former trust fund kid whose parents cut him off for not conforming to his family's expectations. Their neighbor across the hall is an accountant by day, drag queen by night. August's found family lives and breathes queer culture in a Brooklyn nearly - but not completely - foreign to Jane's experience in the 70s. McQuiston does a magnificent job showing just how far LGBTQ acceptance has come in the last half-century, but never forgets to weave in that there is still so much further to go as well. There's even nods to events in queer history that many of us today don't know about, like the arson of the Upstairs Lounge. This is a story deeply steeped in queer culture and is characterized by resilience, love, spirit, and determination - perfectly fitting to kick off pride month this year. Overall, this book was just so lovely. McQuiston poured their heart into this beautiful queer story that explores all kinds of love - family, friends, and romantic - and it shows on every single page. There are plot twists that you don't see coming, moments that make you laugh out loud, and moments that break your heart. Again, I loved Red, White, and Royal Blue, but I loved One Last Stop even more. I hate to compare them because they're very different types of queer story, but since McQuiston wrote both, the comparison is inevitable. You will not be disappointed - One Last Stop is whatever the opposite of a sophomore slump is. I cannot wait to see what stories McQuiston tells next! Review: 10/10 romance, 8/10 pacing and coincidences - At the start, the book felt a bit slow and August is a passive protagonist kind of watching the story drag her along with it. But pretty soon she takes the reigns and the story picks up, and everything is in full swing and it's absolutely amazing. The romance blossoms, and keeps getting better straight through to the end, pretty much making me forget all of my qualms with the story. But the main thing that kept pulling at me was the author's willingness to rely on coincidences, and she would often switch scope to forget about other aspects of the world. It felt a bit more like a fantasy novel because of that. Minor spoilers: specifically with August's school/classes. The story just directly drops them when the romance gets going, and then somehow August doesn't face any consequences for it. Which, I do appreciate the very focused romance without many distractions, I just wish it had been dealt with in a more logically consistent way.
| ASIN | 152909948X |
| Best Sellers Rank | #5,169,487 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #559 in LGBTQ+ Romance (Books) #662 in Romantic Comedy (Books) #54,166 in Contemporary Romance (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (12,689) |
| Dimensions | 5.16 x 1.1 x 7.72 inches |
| Edition | Main Market |
| ISBN-10 | 1839031891 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1839031892 |
| Item Weight | 11.3 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 432 pages |
| Publication date | April 14, 2022 |
| Publisher | Macmillan |
| Reading age | 18 years and up |
E**T
A love letter to the LGBTQ community...happy pride month!
I truly cannot express enough how much I loved this book. I enjoyed Red, White, and Royal Blue, and when I saw that Casey McQuiston had a new book coming out, I was excited, but One Last Stop far surpassed my already high expectations. This book is an absolute delight with an entire cast of characters to fall in love with, and a unique and creative plot that keeps you hooked. While the story and the romance are both wonderful and most certainly worth reading the book for, the thing that I found most enticing is the story it tells about queerness over the last fifty years. Jane, a 70s lesbian who lived and loved in a time where being gay was illegal, has been transplanted into the modern age by being stuck on a subway train. August is a Louisiana bisexual who moves to New York to reinvent herself away from her mother, whose obsession with finding her brother who's been missing since the 70s has stifled August and her own identity formation. August moves into an apartment shared by an electrical engineer-turned-artist, a real life psychic, and a former trust fund kid whose parents cut him off for not conforming to his family's expectations. Their neighbor across the hall is an accountant by day, drag queen by night. August's found family lives and breathes queer culture in a Brooklyn nearly - but not completely - foreign to Jane's experience in the 70s. McQuiston does a magnificent job showing just how far LGBTQ acceptance has come in the last half-century, but never forgets to weave in that there is still so much further to go as well. There's even nods to events in queer history that many of us today don't know about, like the arson of the Upstairs Lounge. This is a story deeply steeped in queer culture and is characterized by resilience, love, spirit, and determination - perfectly fitting to kick off pride month this year. Overall, this book was just so lovely. McQuiston poured their heart into this beautiful queer story that explores all kinds of love - family, friends, and romantic - and it shows on every single page. There are plot twists that you don't see coming, moments that make you laugh out loud, and moments that break your heart. Again, I loved Red, White, and Royal Blue, but I loved One Last Stop even more. I hate to compare them because they're very different types of queer story, but since McQuiston wrote both, the comparison is inevitable. You will not be disappointed - One Last Stop is whatever the opposite of a sophomore slump is. I cannot wait to see what stories McQuiston tells next!
P**A
10/10 romance, 8/10 pacing and coincidences
At the start, the book felt a bit slow and August is a passive protagonist kind of watching the story drag her along with it. But pretty soon she takes the reigns and the story picks up, and everything is in full swing and it's absolutely amazing. The romance blossoms, and keeps getting better straight through to the end, pretty much making me forget all of my qualms with the story. But the main thing that kept pulling at me was the author's willingness to rely on coincidences, and she would often switch scope to forget about other aspects of the world. It felt a bit more like a fantasy novel because of that. Minor spoilers: specifically with August's school/classes. The story just directly drops them when the romance gets going, and then somehow August doesn't face any consequences for it. Which, I do appreciate the very focused romance without many distractions, I just wish it had been dealt with in a more logically consistent way.
L**S
an absolute masterpiece.
This is the book of representation we need. This is the sapphic romance I have been searching for my entire life. This is nectarines and five sugars in coffee and leather jackets and pancakes. It’s requesting the perfect song on 90.9 while eating the Su Special. I will say right now that this is the best book I have read in 2022 and it trumps everything I’ve read and loved this year by a mile. Twenty stars, please. The soft melding of supernatural into this romance was absolutely amazing, but I don’t even need to talk about that. I need to talk about the love. The LOVE. Between all the characters. August and Jane. Niko, Myla, Wes, Isaiah. Literally everyone else. I cannot stop screaming in my head about how much I adore these beautiful people that should not be fictional. I need them in my life, right now. I need them to be my best friends. If I had found this in New York, I might not despise the city as much as I do. Ok, let’s get to this, because August and Jane are adorable and their story is so lovely. I got major invisible life of Addie Larue vibes with the chapters beginning with snippets of people catching glimpses of Jane doing something on the Q line and with august and her notebooks of recording janes life. But that was just a cherry on top rather than a focus. The things they talk about, the discoveries they make about one another, is just pure gold. You can feel the love spilling out of the pages between these two. I just… ugh there aren’t enough ways for me to gush about this romance. Then we have myla and niko and they are so precious I want to adopt them as my same-age parents. The family they’ve built is pure and loving and as august put, it’s like myla inserts herself into your life as if she’s always been there. And that’s how I feel about all of these characters. Like they have been with me all this time even though I’m just now moving in to their apartment. Each of them brings something so special to the book and it would not be the same without any of them. This book might have been august and jane’s romance, but it is just as much the core four’s story as well. I demand a Wes and Isaiah story, because I need so much more of their love and the adventures of Annie Depressant. And now I can get to the representation. I have hated all the sapphic romances I’ve read this year for multitudes of reasons, but this one is so much more than that. This is representation at its finest. Literally every letter of our pride alphabet is done so beautifully, I’ve never felt more seen and at home in a book. From drag queens to trans reveals, from questioning to being unapologetically you, this book gives you everything. I mean e v e r y t h i n g. It needs to be put on a billboard and blasted across the radio. I would call in so much to profess my love that they would accept a request a week early ‘just in case’. I’ve never wished I could read a book again for the first time like I have with this one. I want this family in my life like I want Christmas in July and Isaiah’s Easter brunch at 7pm and pancake Billy’s house of pancakes at 2am. If you are still reading this review, please stop waiting and read this book. It is worth it. I need it again.
L**Z
This book was everything. I mean not only does it have the cutest sapphic romance but it also has the best trope ever aka found family full of queer 20-something people. I love Jane and August so much. I love everyone from apartment 6F so much. I love everything about this book so much. I smiled and laughed so much, and I also cried at times. I half listened to the audiobook and half read the paperback and I love how the audiobook gave so much life to all the characters.
A**A
the book came to me in great condition, the story is great, i love the main character, and of course i’m in love with Jane, I really enjoyed reading this novel!! (wouldn’t recommend it to people 16 and under though, because there are some spicy scenes here)
A**Z
Sem dúvidas o melhor livro de edição em inglês que eu já comprei pela Amazon, apesar de não ter iniciado a leitura ainda porque chegou agora a pouco já posso dizer que estou satisfeita pela forma como o livro chegou! Bem embalado, dez dias antes do prazo de entrega e de quebra por um preço ótimo que achei em promo, apenas 19,92 !!!!! Já tive outras experiências ruins onde os livros vieram mais amassados e não vieram bem embalados, mas esse me surpreendeu !!! Espero que de tudo certo na compra de vocês, a capa me lembrou muito o sensorial da capa de pachinko e mulheres que correm com os lobos
M**R
I have read this book in two days flat. Would've been one day, but i had stuff to do. It is amazing. I bought this on preorder right after I finished Red, White and Royal Blue because I loved that book and I wasn't disappointed with this one in the least. It has a more complicated story line, and it doesn't make sense some time, but it is enjoyable and funny and the characters are amazing. You have to suspend your disbelief at certain turns when the book combines Astrology, Time travel and Just a hint of supernatural energy, but you will most definitely have at least one character in this book you identify with and who you can steal certain traits from. ( I don't judge, i do it too. ) The LGBTQ+ aspect in this book is was more pronounced and "important" than the last one, you have characters from every walk of life. From a plus sized bisexual detective to a trans male psychic to a black drag queen to a shy nerdy emotionally repressed gay, they all get treated with a loving hand and kind words and the utmost care. I would definitely recommend reading this and I can't wait for her next book.
E**A
slow burn but so worth it
TrustPilot
4天前
1 周前