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domingo, 17 de junio de 2018

The Season - Jonah Lisa Dyer & Stephen Dyer

"English:
Pride and Prejudice meets She's the Man"




She can score a goal, do sixty box jumps in a row, bench press a hundred and fifty pounds…but can she learn to curtsey?
Megan McKnight is a soccer star with Olympic dreams, but she’s not a girly girl. So when her Southern belle mother secretly enters her in the 2016 Dallas debutante season, she’s furious—and has no idea what she’s in for. When Megan’s attitude gets her on probation with the mother hen of the debs, she’s got a month to prove she can ballroom dance, display impeccable manners, and curtsey like a proper Texas lady or she’ll get the boot and disgrace her family. The perk of being a debutante, of course, is going to parties, and it’s at one of these lavish affairs where Megan gets swept off her feet by the debonair and down-to-earth Hank Waterhouse. If only she didn’t have to contend with a backstabbing blonde and her handsome but surly billionaire boyfriend, Megan thinks, being a deb might not be so bad after all. But that’s before she humiliates herself in front of a room full of ten-year-olds, becomes embroiled in a media-frenzy scandal, and gets punched in the face by another girl.
The season has officially begun…but the drama is just getting started.


The SeasonThe Season by Jonah Lisa Dyer
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is, without doubt, a Pride and Prejudice retelling, is an exact copy of the original storyline. The big drama changes a bit, in this scenario we don't have five daughters so the big Lydia-Wickham thig is on our Elizabeth, aka Megan.

I was hoping for a little more of soccer along the book, but I can't complain. The debutant thing takes all the space, the traditions and the virtue are a big thing in this world, but the thing I liked was that the variety of sexual orientations and how takes resemblance along the book.

With the spirit of Jane Austen's original book and slightly changes The Season has won my heart. It's true that here the prejudice part is way bigger than in the original book and the pride part is in the shadows for this retelling while in Austen's is really big, but that doesn't change the final result of me really enjoying this book.

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