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Seven Days by Eve Ainsworth
Seven Days by Eve Ainsworth









Seven Days by Eve Ainsworth Seven Days by Eve Ainsworth

I was completely engrossed in their story. It was about reading more into things, seeing the signs that maybe something wasn’t right in Will and Anna’s relationship, balancing the line between normal and not-normal. It’s a really thought-provoking book that proved to be a bit of a reminder that the personality and motives of a person is never just black and white – their experiences from youth shape them into who they are. I genuinely felt for every character involved in this story whether I particularly liked them or not as their stories were delivered in an insightful way allowing me to connect with each one of them. In its exploration of the fragility of relationships both romantically and between families, Crush is quite an eye-opener to some of the things that go on behind closed doors. Almost unsettling to read in that I wanted to step in and protect her character but I believed in her from page one, trusting she had the strength to overcome anything. Crush took me back a few years to when I was in school and all the emotion and dialogue came across really realistically, like Anna was a real person and her story was playing out in reality right in front of me. The scene is set perfectly early on – the school setting, the slight naivety, the way teenagers genuinely feel and how they prioritise and juggle time with friends, family and boyfriends/girlfriends. The pace of this story is not rushed, everything unfolds naturally from the feeling of falling in love to the confusion, the obsession, sadness and the blame of everything that transpires during and after. But the true core to their relationship is heart-breaking to read. Will is her escape from every bad thing she’s trying to avoid. When Will, the older guy in school that every girl wants after, shows an interest in Anna, it draws in unwanted attention from everybody in school but Anna is so taken with the feeling of being in love, she almost doesn’t notice.

Seven Days by Eve Ainsworth

It’s a bit lonely for her now only living with her dad and younger brother and at school she doesn’t have many friends either, just Izzy and Dan. The experience of abuse ultimately is different for everyone but the hurt and confusion Eve draws upon is so recognisable and plausible so that even if you can’t relate to a similar experience, you will be moved by the way things play out.Īnna is a fourteen year old girl attempting to come to terms with her mum walking out on her family. There’s such an important message in this book and one that needs to be explored in young adult fiction and Eve gets every feeling, every emotion and every bit of pain spot on. It’s a dark theme told extraordinarily well by the author, with highly drawn emotion and a poignancy that at times had me moved to tears. Crush is a really impactful, beautifully written story of an abusive relationship between two teenagers.











Seven Days by Eve Ainsworth