![]() ![]() So I scrapped that version and rewrote it from just Ever’s point of view. ![]() It was actually fairly easy for me to write the dual POV! I originally wrote Loveboat, Taipei from all four of the main characters’ points of view (with a few chapters from Rick’s girlfriend, Jenna), but found that I couldn’t do justice to all of their journeys in 120,000 words. Interview What was the hardest, and easiest, part of writing dual POV? Was Sophie easier to write than Ever? Please consider supporting your local bookstore, which can be accessed through Indiebound or Bookshop: Loveboat Reunion is available for order at all major retailers. Sophie’s college professor thinks her first major project is “too feminine.” Xavier’s father gives him an ultimatum: finish high school or be cut off from his inheritance. Xavier, on the other hand, just wants to stay under his overbearing father’s radar, collect his trust fund when he turns eighteen, and concentrate on what makes him happy, for the first time ever.īut the world doesn’t seem to want Sophie and Xavier to succeed. Forget finding the right guy to make her dreams come true-Sophie is going to make her future happen for herself. Sophie is determined to be the best student Dartmouth’s ever had. Now fall is here, and it’s time to focus on what really matters. They’ve left the drama behind them back in Taipei-at their summer program, Loveboat-forever. Spectacularly.Īt least they’re friends now. It’s a classic tale of girl-meets-boy, boy-meets-other-girl, heart-gets-broken, revenge-is-plotted, everything-blows-up. ![]()
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