![]() I’m not sure I really one hundred percent loved the explanation, but I don’t think that’s really the main point to this story to be honest. I also liked that it even delved deeper into how Naho and her friends received letters from their future selves, even though it was a little vague. I liked that this second book went more in depth with the idea of multiple timelines that was first presented in book number one. Thank God the ending didn’t end up being what I was bracing myself for, but it definitely still played with my emotions. I was so anxious because I really didn’t want the story to end in a way that would make me bawl my eyes out. I just wanted to keep reading so badly, I didn’t think about how much my emotions wouldn’t be able to handle it. I will say that I probably wasn’t emotionally prepared to jump from the first book right into the second as quickly as I did. Orange is definitely more like one long story. ![]() This second volume wasn’t like a separate story arc or anything, it literally just continued right where we left off in book one. ![]() Not because I didn’t love it as much, because I definitely did, but because my thoughts are mostly the same. Genre/Themes: Romance, Contemporary, Science Fictionīook Depository | Amazon | Chapters/Indigo | Goodreadsįirst things first, I won’t be writing as in-depth a review for this volume as I did for book number one. ![]()
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