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Thank you to Penguin Teen and NetGalley for my DRC of this title in exchange for my honest review. Micah is questioning her beliefs. She isn't questioning her Christian faith, but instead some of the teachings. She and her boyfriend Ty have been spending a lot of time sneaking away to make out and she wonders if she really wants to wait for marriage to give herself to someone or if she is ready now... if they are ready now.Along with this development in her life, she is dealing with so much
295 of 20213.5 ✨Book two in the series and I enjoyed it a lot. It dealt with some serious subject matters, and had some more depth and heaviness than book one. This one focused a lot on family, loss, grief, and trauma.Micah is a church girl with very strict parents. She and her boyfriend T work together in church camp over the summer, and they are debating taking the next step in their relationship. Micah deals with a lot in this book, including panic attacks, the upcoming anniversary of her bro...
(c/p from my review on TheStoryGraph) I really enjoyed this installment, probably because I understand Micah as a person. This book hit on a lot of great themes and handled them really well. I do think that the length is a bit of a disadvantage in these stories. Like I appreciate that they are novellas but sometimes the shortness of them means things tie up too quickly and plot threads dangle. Just a few dozen pages more and this book would have been perfect.TW for this book include: Death (incl...
While I enjoyed the first book in the Flyy Girls series, this one wasn't as good.Thank you to Penguin Teen for providing me with an ARC of this book. All thoughts are my own. Last month I read Lux which is the first book in the Flyy Girls series and I quite enjoyed it. I was provided with an ARC of this second book so I thought I would take the opportunity to read it. However, this book did not meet my expectations. This book is also a Hi-Lo book which means that it is written so that there is h...
a good second book! i think i enjoyed the first one a little bit more. but, this one explored some good topics! i love how all these books portray their friendship.
I love this series. I read both the first and second books back to back and they standalone as much as shine together playing off the characters and situations but still each unique to the book. In this one Micah has anxiety as it relates to the death of her brother which is a small mystery within the book. Otherwise, it's about Micah's relationship with her parents, her "good girl" status, and her wanting to be closer to her boyfriend with a smattering of the Flyy Girls in the background: the g...
Skipping forward a few months from the last book, the Flyy Girls are enjoying their summer vacation, though some more than others. Micah is struggling with the uptick in her panic attacks as they approach the one year anniversary of her older brother's passing, and she's trying to find a balance between her faith and always striving to be the perfect daughter, and her secret relationship with Ty, who she thinks she's ready to take the next step with. And on top of all this, Micah is trying to fi...
Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for giving me the opportunity to read an ARC of this wonderful book! After hearing Ashley Woodfolk speak about the series at SLJ Teen Live, I knew I was going to love this series! I read the first book, Lux: The New Girl, and loved it, and I really love Micah: The Good Girl as well. Micah is a very different kind of person from Lux, and I think it is amazing that Woodfolk is able to give such different characters such equally strong voices. Micah suffers
After reading Lux: The New Girl, I immediately dove into this second book. I love the way this mini-series is formatted! Not only do we eventually get to spend time with all the characters in the Flyy Girls, but each story is complete on its own. I loved learning about Micah from Lux's perspective in book one, then jumping into Micah's head this time around.As with all of Ashley Woodfolk's books, her characterization is STELLAR. She manages to make everyone feel so real, so alive -- an especiall...
Thank you Penguin Teen for sending me a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.I agree with the other reviews - this book isn't as good as the first one. I do appreciate how diverse the characters in this series are though. It is a realistic portrayal of life in an urban city/school. Micah is the "good girl," because she comes from a religious family and frequents Church. Woodfolk does a good job of giving each girl layers and dimensions and Micah is no different. She faces the issue...
I cried during this one
"If she was good, if she followed the rules and made smart decisions and did as she was told, things would turn out good. But when Milo died, Micah’s whole world seemed out of control. Because he had always done everything right."(p. 54). Book Two of the Flyy Girls and this one chronicles Micah, the sensitive artist who spends her time with the church and her boyfriend Ty as she struggles through the death of her perfect brother and to remain herself around her friends the Flyy Girls in a city t...