Love Me Never (Lovely Vicious) by Sara Wolf
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Love Me Never (Lovely Vicious)

by

Sara Wolf

(Author)

4.3

-

2,511 ratings


Read the book that Kirkus Review called: "A complex, witty page-turner, ideal for YA fans of scandal and romance."

Seventeen-year-old Isis Blake hasn’t fallen in love in three years, nine weeks, and five days, and after what happened last time, she intends to keep it that way. Since then she’s lost eighty-five pounds, gotten four streaks of purple in her hair, and moved to Buttcrack-of-Nowhere, Ohio, to help her mom escape a bad relationship.

All the girls in her new school want one thing―Jack Hunter, the Ice Prince of East Summit High. Hot as an Armani ad, smart enough to get into Yale, and colder than the Arctic, Jack Hunter’s never gone out with anyone. Sure, people have seen him downtown with beautiful women, but he’s never given high school girls the time of day. Until Isis punches him in the face.

Jack’s met his match. Suddenly everything is a game.

The goal: Make the other beg for mercy.

The game board: East Summit High.

The reward: Something neither of them expected.

Previously published as Lovely Vicious, this fully revised and updated edition is full of romance, intrigue, and laugh-out-loud moments.

The Lovely Vicious series is best enjoyed in order.

Reading Order:

  • Book #1 Love Me Never
  • Book #2 Forget Me Always
  • Book #3 Remember Me Forever

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ISBN-10

1633752291

ISBN-13

978-1633752290

Print length

304 pages

Language

English

Publisher

Entangled

Publication date

April 04, 2016

Dimensions

5.34 x 0.98 x 8.15 inches

Item weight

10.7 ounces


Product details

ASIN :

B00YM6RDVC

File size :

2159 KB

Text-to-speech :

Enabled

Screen reader :

Supported

Enhanced typesetting :

Enabled

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Editorial reviews

A complex, witty page-turner, ideal for YA fans of scandal and romance. - Kirkus Review

"The Lovely Vicious series blew me away. Gripping, dark, and clever -- truly one of my favorites!" - Penelope Douglas, New York Times bestselling author of Bully

"It's rare to find a unique writing voice that is so enjoyable and done so well. Enjoy the ride!" - J. Sterling, New York Times bestselling author of 10 Years Later

"AHHHHHHH!!!! I love Isis Blake! I want to meet her! I want to be her best friend! Ok, I'll settle down now. What a super fun story - soooo well written. The witty mind of this girl is so fun to encounter. Snarky but loveable. Young girls could learn a lot from her. More! I want more of her story! Sara Wolf is my new favorite. And I am one of those hard to please readers!" - Jo Hick, Librarian at Phillips Public Library

5 stars: "Loved. Adored. Fell in love. Cried. This book was everything. I can't wait to get my hands on the next one." - Jessica, The Lovely Books

5 stars: "Sara Wolf gives you what you're looking for even if your not looking for it! A girl who is damaged but is trying to take care of herself and trying to heal in the process. A boy who is the Ice Prince, but is melting because he meets his match, a storm of fire. Secrets will be free, love is what you will feel, even if you don't want it. Darkness and light will collide and you will enjoy being in the process!!" - Laura Leiva, Letter Shelves Blog

5 stars: "Simply amazing!!! I fell in love with this story from page one" - Nicole

"[I]t's funny, snarky, heartbreaking and captivating. Honestly just my kinda book." - Deniz, Closet Geeks and Slo Mo

5 stars: "This book has it all. So yes, I recommend it to everyone." - Bibliophile (Romance Addict)

5 stars: "I laughed out-loud, I cried, I was breathless and I mended a broken heart during this journey." - Vasiliki Tzifaki

"Isis. Was. Everything. She was, quite frankly, HILARIOUS. Seriously, I have never read a character with this much snark, this much sass...her internal thoughts had me in stitches, and the bantering she engaged in -- particularly with Jack -- was just delightful to read. And it wasn't just witty repartee, sometimes Isis would devolve into childish humour too, and I enjoyed the range she showed -- she was more than just one thing. I started highlighting, and soon realized I would be highlighting half the book if I kept that up." - Lenore Kosinski, Celebrity Readers Blog

5 stars: "The antagonism that goes on between Isis & Jack had me staying up until 2am on a work night because I couldn't put the book down." - Olga Medved

5 stars: "Isis and Jack's story is an awesome, bittersweet war of the roses, teen style that's worth hanging on to that cliff for the next book. I highly recommend Isis and Jack's Love Me Never as a must read." - Debbie, I Heart YA Books

5 stars: "Isis is an easy heroine to like, I loved her babbling and wacky sense of humour! I lost count of how many times I laughed out loud after the first several chapters. [Love Me Never] was seriously addictive!" - Chanelle

5 stars: "I like Jack and Isis, they're fantastic main characters with fascinating personalities. Everything about [Love Me Never] is just right. It's different, it's entertaining, it's intriguing and it has several layers of depth as well. I highly recommend this amazing story." - Suze, With Love For Books

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Sample

Chapter One

3 years, 9 weeks, 5 days

When I was six, Dad told me something really true: everyone has a to-do list.

It took me another eleven years to actually get around to making one, but thanks to a certain asshole in my life, it’s finished:

  1. Don’t talk about love.

  2. Don’t think about love.

  3. Thinking and talking about love leads to Love, which is the enemy. Do not consort with the enemy. Even if those hot-ass actors in the movies make it look cuddly and nice and tempting, don’t fall for it. It’s the biggest bad in the world, the worst villain ever created by hormone-pumped pubescent morons. It’s the Joker, Lex Luthor, that one overweight guy who’s always messing with the Scooby-Doo gang. It’s the final boss in the massive joke of a video game you call your life.

Everyone at Avery Brighton’s party right now has their own to-do list, and most of them look identical to the following:

  1. Get drunk.

  2. Get more drunk.

  3. Try not to vomit on anyone cute.

  4. Try to score with the cute person you tried your best not to vomit on.

It’s a foolproof list that’s easy for even idiots to follow. It ensures you’re drunk enough to think everyone is cute, so that you don’t throw up on anyone, and so you try to score with everyone. It’s basically a how-to for people who watch too much TV and think having fun is getting blind drunk and making out with someone they don’t remember. It makes everyone here intolerable. Especially the boys. One of them slings his arm around my shoulders, red in the face and murmuring suggestively about going somewhere quieter.

He has no idea who I am. He has no idea what I’ve been through.

He’s an idiot. But then again, most people are.

I wrinkle my lip and push him off before I hurry into the kitchen. People are too busy boozing up here to bother hitting on girls. Not that I get hit on a lot. Getting hit on is still a new thing, a weird thing, because boys don’t generally hit on fat girls and that’s what I used to be. The fat girl.

I pull my Florence and the Machine T-shirt lower to make sure it covers everything. Flaunting your stretch marks to the entire “cool” populace of East Summit High probably isn’t the best way to make influential friends. Or friends, period. I’d settle for either. Hell, I’d settle for an enemy at this rate. Without an anchor, the sea of high school is the shittiest ride in the world.

“Isis!” A drunk girl sloshes up to me, black hair plastered to her face with sweat. “Hiiiii! How are…What…You’re doing in here?”

“Uh, yes?” I try. She giggles.

“I’m Kayla. We met in history of the…planet.”

“World history,” I offer.

“Yeah!” She claps and points at me. “Wow. You are really smart.”

“I’ll be really wet if you don’t stop that.” I gently position her hand upright, her red cup of beer precariously dripping on the floor and my jeans.

“Oh, will you be wet?” She closes both her eyes really hard and smiles. When I don’t react, she does it again.

“What are you doing?” I ask.

“Winking!”

“Where I come from, that’s called drunk.”

“Drunk?” She buzzes her lips in a laugh, spraying a bit of beer-spit over me. “Not little a even!”

“Look, you’re really”—I pause as Kayla burps—“great, and thanks for talking to the weird new girl, but I think you need to lie down. Or possibly go back in time. Before the invention of liquor.”

“You’re so funny! Who invited you?”

“Avery.”

“Ohhh, she’s doing that thing again.” Kayla laughs. “Don’t drink the punch!”

“What thing?”

“She invites alllll the new kids to a party. If they stay the entire night without crying or wetting themselves, they’re cool in our book.”

Great. Seven hours of binge drinking crappy beer bought by someone’s older brother is the proving ground for who’s cool and who’s not. I should’ve expected that from a boring, sterile little Ohio suburb like this one.

“What’s in the punch?” I ask, looking over my shoulder at the giant plastic bowl filled with ruby liquid.

“Powdered lax…laxa…pooping powder!” Kayla concludes. A few boys circle around her like sharks, just waiting for the moment she passes the threshold from drunk to too-drunk-to-protest. I glower at them over her shoulder, pull her by the hand upstairs, and go to the second landing, where it’s quiet and not full of horny vultures. We lean on the banister and watch the chaos below.

“So where are you from again?” Kayla asks. Now that she isn’t swaying crazily, I can get a good look at her. Her dark hair and eyes make her one of the few nonwhite people in the school. Her skin’s amber, the color of honeycomb. She’s really pretty. Better than most of the girls here, anyway, and definitely way better than me.

“I’m from Florida,” I say. “Good Falls. Tiny, boring place. Lots of mosquitoes and football jocks.”

“Sounds a lot like here.” She giggles, chugging the rest of her beer. Someone downstairs opens a can of cocktail wieners and starts throwing them around. Girls shriek and duck and pick them out of their hair and boys chuck them at each other and try to get them down girls’ shirts. A wiener flies up and gets stuck in the chandelier, and Kayla ooohs.

“Avery’s mom isn’t gonna like that,” she says.

“Her parents are probably loaded snobs.”

“How did you know? They’re VEOs or something.”

“CEOs.”

“Yeah! I guess it’s a really important job, but then I thought about it really hard and how can it be so important if it’s only three letters?”

“You may be onto something. Something very drunk, but definitely something.”

She beams at me, and then reaches over to touch a piece of my hair. “I like that color.”

“Violet Madness,” I say. “That’s what the box called it.”

“Oh, you dyed it yourself? Cool!”

It was part of my pact with myself: lose weight, dye my hair, get clothes that actually fit. Become a better person. Become the person a certain someone would wanna date. But I don’t tell Kayla that, because that was the old me—the one who thought love wasn’t stupid. The one who’d do anything for a boy, even lose eighty-five pounds dieting and sweating like a pig. The one who’d go to crappy little clubs to drink and smoke just to hang out with his friends. Not even him. His friends. I tried to get accepted by them, like it’d make him like me more.

But that’s not me anymore. I’m not in Good Falls, Florida. I’m in Northplains, Ohio. No one knows the old me, so I won’t drag her into the limelight just to embarrass the new me. I’m desperate for friends, not socially suicidal. There’s a fine, pathetic line between the two and I’m toeing it like a ballet dancer at her first recital.

“Oh shit,” Kayla hisses suddenly. “I didn’t know he’d be here.”

I look to where her eyes are riveted. It’s unmistakable who she’s talking about.

Amid the chaos of the wiener-throwing and drunk flail-dancing to Skrillex is a single island of still calm. He’s gotta be six feet at least. His shoulders are broad, and everything about him is lean—his waist, his long legs, his ridiculously sharp cheekbones. His messy hair isn’t quite blond but isn’t quite brown, either, more like a tumbleweed color. Next to me, Kayla is ogling him with all she’s got, and she isn’t the only one. Girls froze when he walked in, and guys are throwing him stink eye. Whoever he is, I can already tell he’s one of those people who are popular in all the wrong ways.

He walks farther into the party, keeping to himself. Normally you nod at people as you walk in or look for someone you know in the sea of the crowd. But not this guy. He just walks. He doesn’t have to push or shove his way through—people part naturally. It’s like he’s got an invisible shield around him. He wears a permanent bored expression, like everything around him is completely uninteresting.

“That’s Jack. Jack Hunter,” Kayla whispers. “He never comes to parties like this. They’re way beneath him.”

“Beneath him? He’s in high school, Kayla, not the royal goddamn court.”

“He’s got a nickname around here—Ice Prince. So he sort of is royalty.”

I laugh. When Kayla’s face remains serious, I stop.

“Wait, you’re not kidding? You guys actually call him that?”

She flushes. “Well, yeah! Just like we call Carlos the massive quarterback Mountain Man and the creepy guy with too many knives who likes to hang around the library Creeper McJeepers. Jack is Ice Prince because that’s what he is!”

I splutter another laugh, and this one must be too loud, because it makes Jack look up. Now that he’s closer, I can see his face well. The bored expression does nothing for him. Kayla’s whispering, “He’s cute,” to me, but that’s not it at all. He’s not baby-faced, boy-next-door cute in the way girls giggle about during sleepovers or between classes. He’s handsome; the kind of lion-eyed, sharp-nosed, broad-lipped handsome you see in Italian suit ads. I can see why they call him Ice Prince. Aside from the thick fog of pretentiousness that follows him, his eyes are the color of a lake frozen through—a blue so light it looks almost translucent.

And they’re looking right at me.

Kayla makes a noise disturbingly similar to an agitated cricket and hides behind my shoulder. “He’s looking at us!” she hisses.

“Why are you hiding?”

Kayla mumbles something into my shirt.

I roll my eyes. “You like him.”

“Not so loud!” She pinches my neck and pulls.

“Ow, ow! You can’t have my vertebrae, I need those!”

“Then don’t say dumb things like that so loud!”

“But you do like him!”

She twists, and I yelp. Our din is doing nothing to avert Jack’s eyes—or anyone else’s. I manage to pry her fingers off the part of my nervous system that keeps me breathing and duck into the bathroom to pee. In the semi-quiet only a bathroom surrounded by a raging party can offer, I realize Kayla’s the first person who’s bothered to talk to me since I’ve moved here. Everyone else stared, whispered, but never actually talked to me. I was beginning to think I was diseased, or awful, or possibly even dead. Either Kayla can talk to ghosts or she’s just a nice person. Too nice.

I was like that, once upon a time.

The toilet’s a mess, and I pat it in sympathy on my way out. Stay strong, buddy. One way or another, this will all be over soon. Either we’ll all drop dead of alcohol poisoning, or your bowl will erode from the acidity of the gallons of vomit you’ve been subjected to. Do they give you retirement benefits? No? They should. We should protest. Picket. Toilet Union United.

When I’m done talking to the toilet in a completely sane manner, I walk out to the exact thing I didn’t want to see—Kayla, downstairs again. The boys are leaving her alone, thank God. All except one. Or rather, it’s one boy she’s not leaving alone.

“I don’t u-usually see you at these kinds of parties,” Kayla stammers to none other than Jack Hunter himself.

“No. I don’t particularly enjoy rolling in mud. Tonight’s an exception.” He looks around the room, his lip curling. “But you do, I’m guessing.”

“W-What? No, I mean, I’m just Avery’s friend. She makes me come. I don’t even really like these parties—”

“Your speech is slurred and you’re stumbling. You can barely control your own body. If you have to get this drunk to stand the parties your friends make you go to, you’re an idiot who’s made the wrong friends.”

Kayla’s expression stiffens, like she’s been slapped, and then her eyes start watering. My blood boils. Who the hell does he think he is?

“That’s n-not what I meant—” Kayla starts.

“And you seem exactly like the type of girl to stay with friends she hates. They probably hate you, too. It must be easy, hiding it behind all that booze and all those name brands.”

Kayla’s tears overflow onto her cheeks. Jack sighs.

“You’re so spineless you collapse into tears the second anyone says the truth?”

My heart’s thumping in my chest. My fists squeeze so tight I can’t feel my fingers. His cruelty leaves a bitter taste in my mouth—it’s a lot like someone I used to know.

Someone who ruined my life forever.

I shove aside the red-faced boy who tries to hit on me again and launch myself through the crowd. Kayla isn’t my friend. No one here is. But she’s been four seconds of nice to me—true nice, not Avery’s sugary poison of inviting-me-to-this-weird-test-party nice. And four seconds is more than I ever thought I’d get. It’s the most I’ve had in a long time. Jack’s lip quirks up in a sneer. Say it. Say one more thing, pretty boy. I dare you to.

“You’re pathetic,” he says.

That’s the first time I punch Jack Hunter’s face.

And as my knuckles connect with his stupid high cheekbones and he staggers back with a furious blizzard brewing in his icy eyes, I somehow get the feeling it won’t be the last.

“Apologize to Kayla,” I demand, and the entire house goes quiet. It starts like a ripple, the people next to me and Kayla and Jack falling silent. And then it moves, jumping like a flea, like a disease, silent and ominous and spreading faster than a cat picture among aunts on Facebook. It’s like the entire party has stopped, slowed down just to see what Jack will do. They want a show. They’re a pack of ruthless little hyenas and I just bit the lion. Maybe Jack can sense that, because once he gets over his shock, he glances around carefully like he’s plotting his next move, and then fixes me with a glare so frigid it could probably freeze lava.

“Judging by your expression”—I cross my arms and glower—“getting punched for being an ass is something new.”

He dabs at his nose with his hand, a little blood trickling down to his mouth. He licks it leisurely off his thumb. Kayla’s white-faced and stuck in place like a mannequin. The music blares hollowly and the bass thumps, the only thing daring to interfere with the tense quiet the entire room is waiting on.

Jack doesn’t speak. So I do.

“Let me use really small words so you understand,” I say with exaggerated slowness. “Apologize to Kayla for what you said before I make you bleed harder.”

Someone in the crowd snickers. Whispers move into people’s ears and out their mouths. I don’t care what they think or whether or not I failed the stupid party test. I only care that he apologizes to Kayla. He hurt her in more ways than he knows.

“Why are you defending a girl you don’t know?” Jack finally asks, his voice deep and with a sable deadly quality to it. “Correct me if I’m wrong, but aren’t you new? That would explain the moronic ignorance. Do they have schools in Florida? Or do you learn from the crocodiles and the rednecks?”

Of course he knows where I’m from—word spreads fast in a town like this. A collective “ooooh” goes around the room. A flush creeps on my cheeks, but I don’t let it faze me. I’ve gotten worse insults. This is nothing. I scoff.

“I can’t stand by and watch while a stuck-up bastard steps on another girl’s heart. It’s not my style.”

This second “ooooh” is a lot louder. I feel pride blossom in my chest. My hands and face are hot, and I’m shaking, but I won’t show it. I won’t let him win. I won’t back down. I dealt with entitled mama’s boys like him by the dozens in my old school in Florida. They’re all the same; we’ll trade insults until I humiliate him in front of these people so badly he can’t fire back. That’s the best way this could happen. Kayla would get her justice.

But that’s not how it happens. He doesn’t fire back. He leans in for the kill, over my shoulder, his lips so close I feel hot air glancing my earlobe.

“Because that happened to you, didn’t it?”

My breath catches. I try to suppress it but I flinch, and when Jack sees that, he laughs. The sound is brittle and cool, like a frozen thing snapping in two. He laughs. Like it’s nothing. I feel like I’m the one who’s been punched. A second of tension passes between our eyes, and then he holds up a hand as if in farewell to the room and leaves through the door, the night lawn crowded with poorly parked cars swallowing him up.

The house starts talking again. People laugh and dance and drink again, making out against walls with renewed vigor. Heat and ice are sloshing through my veins all at once, back and forth. A heavy iron fist is squeezing my heart, and I can’t breathe.

Kayla puts a hand on my shoulder. “Are you okay, Isis?”

How did he know? Could he really read me that well? Yeah, the same thing happened to me. A boy broke my heart— No, more than that. He broke my soul, my heart, and who I used to be. After three years, nine weeks, and five days, I should be able to hide it better. I thought I was good at hiding it. So how the hell could Jack tell?

Everyone’s watching. I can’t run out the door, since that’s the way he went, or they’ll assume things. I can’t go upstairs to be alone, or they’ll assume he won. Won what? I’m not sure yet, but the antagonism that arced between us felt like a fever, uncomfortably warm and refusing to be ignored. I want nothing more than to crawl into someplace quiet and nurse the scab he ripped off my gaping wound, but I can’t. People might be going back to partying, but they’re also watching me for confirmation of what exactly happened, and what I do next will determine that.

He attacked me on my most personal level.

He opened the one injury I never wanted to think about again, the one I came here to escape.

The one that destroyed me.

But I can’t let anyone see that. I can’t let it show. I’m someone else here. I’m not the weak, broken girl I used to be.

It’s time to play my favorite game—pretend.

“He kissed me!” I announce loudly to Kayla. “It was disgusting! All tongue and no skill.”

Kayla’s eyes widen. My words echo back at me over the music in snippets of different people’s voices. Kiss. New girl. Jack Hunter. Ice Prince kissed New Girl. While it spreads, I pull Kayla by the hand and take her into the kitchen. She’s shaking. I put my hands on her shoulders and look her in the eyes.

“You— You and him—” she starts.

“Didn’t do anything,” I murmur. “I swear to you. I just said that to make him look bad.”

Her eyes brighten momentarily, then dim, and somehow that makes me sadder than it makes me angry. She still likes him, even after he called her pathetic in front of a bunch of people. I feel so bad for her. I used to be her and that’s why I feel so damn bad for her.

“I can’t believe you actually punched him!” Kayla says. “You’re crazy!”

“You’re crazy for liking a guy like that.” I sigh. “Didn’t your mother ever tell you to stay away from feral dogs?”

“He’s not a dog!” she protests. “He’s never hit on me!”

“Because he’s gay.”

“He has mature college girlfriends! A new one, like, every week!”

“Because he’s ordering them from Russia. Or Saturn. Whichever has more girls depressingly desperate for money.”

Kayla wobbles, and I help her sit on the polished wood floor against the kitchen counter. There’s a large cupboard. She feels it against her back and drunkenly opens it and crawls inside, closing the doors behind her. I become extremely patient and understanding for an entire ten seconds. I knock. A mutter reverberates from inside.

“Go away.”

“C’mon. I’m not sorry. He deserved it, okay?”

“I’ve liked him since fourth grade!” Kayla mourns. “That was the first time I’ve ever talked to him! And you…you came in and ruined it! It’s over! My life is over!”

“It was a life well spent.” I nod.

“I’m not actually going to die!” She flings the cupboard doors open to wail at me.

“Oh, but you are! In about seventy years. But for now you are very much alive and very much wasted, so I think I’ll drive you home.”

“No! I can drive myself!” She gets out of the cupboard and promptly slips on some Cheetos. I catch her and pull her up, and together we make it through the front door.

“You can drive yourself off a cliff, yes.”

“I might as well!” Kayla moans. “Jack hates me now!”

“Oh pishposh. I’m sure he’ll remember you fondly as the four hundred and thirty-sixth girl he made cry.”

Kayla bursts into tears, and I half drag, half pull her across the lawn and into my tiny VW Beetle. It’s light green and rusted, with a broken headlight and soda cans littering the floor, but it does its job of letting everyone know I’m poor and that’s really all I ask from a car.

“Isis!” a voice calls to me.

Kayla tries to bolt, but she’s so drunk she just wobbles in place a bit and burps. I help her onto the seat and shut the door, turning to face the voice. Avery Brighton makes her way over to me, red curls bouncing and green eyes bright. She’s a picturesque Irish doll with porcelain skin, slender proportions, and a perfect spate of freckles across her button nose. It’s like God airbrushed the crap out of her, ran out of paint for everyone else, looked down at all the babies he was chucking to Earth, and went, Ha-ha-ha whoops but check this one out it’s a masterpiece.

“Are you kidnapping Kayla?” Avery asks, smiling a china doll smile.

“Theoretically, I am totally not the sort of person to do that, but also theoretically if I knew how to kidnap people from looking it up on Google when I was really bored over Christmas break last year, then theoretically there’d be a lot more duct tape and chloroform involved. In theory.”

“Yes, well, that’s very interesting, but I’m going to ask you to give her back. I need her here. To do things for me.”

“She sort of seems out of it? And also she’s really bummed because of some things I don’t know if you saw or not that happened?”

“I saw. It was interesting. Probably the most interesting thing that’s happened all year besides Erika’s suicide attempt,” Avery muses. She looks me up and down, as if seeing me in a new light, and then points at me. “But that doesn’t excuse Kayla from certain duties she needs to perform tonight.”

“That’s sort of weird? Like, it’s a really vague and threatening thing to say about someone? Also I don’t think you own her and she needs to lie down and chill so I’m taking her home?”

I inch around the car to the driver’s side as Avery’s face grows darker and more perfectly deadly vampire-esque.

“Why are you talking in questions?” she asks.

“Why are you? Talking in questions?” I crane my neck over the hood and maintain eye contact. She’s like a bear. A really big, really rich bear. I can’t look away or she’ll charge and use my insides to line her Louis Vuitton purse.

“If you leave now, I’m not inviting you to another party again.”

“Okay? That’s kind of good because I don’t think I want to associate with people who say suicide attempts are interesting? And who make pooping juice and pretend it’s punch? That’s almost as bad as playing Skrillex on loop?”

I quickly jump in, start the car, and pull out. Avery watches with a detached yet irritated twitch in her brow. I roll down the window as I pull up close to her.

“You’re sort of popular so I guess I should thank you for inviting me? Also for threatening me? Like wow, that was a really bad party but a really good threatening? I give you two stars for effort? I’m babbling?” I pause. “Stay in school?”

“You go to my school, idiot.”

She did it. She called me the I-word. The most popular girl in school just called me the I-word. I either have to kill myself, go back to Florida, or drive away really fast and not give a damn. I jam on the gas and swerve around a lion statue as I tear down her driveway, except I don’t swerve fast enough and one of the lion’s testicles goes flying in a fine haze of concrete. I leave behind a bunch of new enemies and a one-balled lion and I’m taking home a maybe-friend who thinks I ruined her crush and even if that sucks, it’s still better than what I came in with, which was just three years, nine weeks, and five days of bad memories.

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About the authors

Sara Wolf

Sara Wolf

Sara Wolf lives in Portland, Oregon, where the sun can’t get her anymore. When she isn’t pouring her allotted life force into writing, she’s reading, accidentally burning houses down whilst baking, or making faces at her highly appreciative cats. She is also the author of the NYT bestselling Lovely Vicious series.


Reviews

Customer reviews

4.3 out of 5

2,511 global ratings

Jennifer G

Jennifer G

5

Love Me Never is an original

Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2016

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Love Me Never is an original. This is the kind of book you stay up reading until 3:30 in the morning even when you know you have to get up for soccer in the morning and will have to fight to stay awake in mass. It's description may sound like a typical teen-age novel; high school girl gets bullied due to her weight, gets her heart crushed by a guy, loses weight, reinvents herself, and starts all over at a new high school. It's far from a typical coming of age novel however.

Isis is the most wonderfully, quirky lead female imaginable. She's so random with her constant rambling and her one of a kind mind. She's a strange blend of confidence and low self-esteem. Her wit is boundless. Jack is the school's Ice Prince. He's beautiful, but unattainable; reserved, brilliant, and possibly dangerous. Their first encounter does not go well and war is declared. They are well matched to go up against one another and both entertained by the challenge of the other.

This book alternated between amusing me, disgusting me, and hurting me. Isis broke my heart. Her aloneness, her lack of true belief in herself, her pain. Jack found so many ways to hurt her. His career, although based on good intentions, is just icky. He's hiding a dark secret, consumed by guilt, but still rationalizing all of his bad behavior. It seems like he has lost so much of his humanity until Isis bursts into his life. Their relationship is more about an unlikely friendship than romance. There is definitely a romance starting, but it's developing from a fragile friendship that neither Jack nor Isis saw coming. Their characters are so well developed and this friendship progressed so naturally that it makes for a believable story and a true connection to the main characters. The secondary characters are also nicely developed (Love our industrious Prez) making it a richer story overall.

I don't want to share what happens toward the end of the book, so that it doesn't ruin your reading, but there is a cliffhanger. This book had such an impact on me. I was gutted by the ending. Just when things were looking up, it's suddenly spoiled. I had fallen for Jack by this time and could feel his pain. Hope is hard to come by and once you start feeling it, to have it disappear is devastating. I am also afraid for Isis. I felt a sense of danger on the final pages coming from Jack's past. I am rooting for Jack and Isis and can't wait to see if my hope is rewarded in book 2.

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4 people found this helpful

Alicia Kobishop

Alicia Kobishop

5

Lovely Vicious contains some of the wittiest, can’t-stop-reading, most lol-inducing writing that I’ve experienced in a while

Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2014

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I’ve never written a book review before. This is my first. Hopefully I can make it sound intelligent.

Why now? Why the need to express my feelings of this particular book through the written word—when I’ve never felt the need to do so before? Well, let me tell you…

Lovely Vicious contains some of the wittiest, can’t-stop-reading, most lol-inducing writing that I’ve experienced in a very long time.

Reflecting on this story made me realize something (many things) about what actually makes a good book. For me, it’s not whether the characters make the choices that I would make. Let’s face it, I’m 36 and it can sometimes be hard for me to relate to the actions or feelings of a teenager. But that did not stop me from loving this book.

It’s about the writing. The absolute best part of Lovely Vicious was the dialogue. If for no other reason at all, read this book for the clever one liners and witty banter. The original humor in this story will have you laughing throughout.

It’s about getting lost in the pages and forgetting everything that’s going on in real life because I want to find out what the characters are going to do (or say) next. I had a hard time putting Lovely Vicious down. I had to force myself when it got too late and I had to get up super early the next morning. When I wasn’t reveling in the creative dialogue and inner monologues of Isis Blake, I was basking in the angst of it all. Why does Jake do what he does? Why is he the way he is? When will they stop trying to hurt each other?! All are questions that forced me to keep reading.

It’s about living vividly through the eyes of a character whose motives I may or may not fully understand. Whether or not I accept a character’s choices doesn’t matter because in life, a single event could affect each of us in a different way. Who am I to judge? I go into a story hoping to enjoy it. And how can I fully enjoy a story if I am judging the characters choices, or the authenticity of a scene? I like to just roll with it and let the author take me on a ride. When the writing is good like it is in this book, the ride is outstanding.

It’s about accepting the book and its characters for what/who they are. Everyone has had their heart broken in one way or another. Do we all react in the same way that Isis did? Of course not. Most of us internalize the wounds, pushing the pain deep inside while pretending to be fine on the outside. But not Isis. She started a war. Instead of being passive, or passive-aggressive when it came to love, she got aggressive-aggressive. Closed off, yes, but in a completely different way than most. In a vicious-mean kind of way with someone just as vicious. And that’s what makes their story so interesting.

It’s about the feeling I get when I read. This book made me happy (sometimes giddy). And frustrated. And scared and sometimes sad. Isn’t that the best thing about reading? FEELING things? For me it is. And this book made me feel lots of things.

Sara Wolf, you have nailed it. Can’t wait to read book 2.

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2 people found this helpful

Portia Lynn

Portia Lynn

5

One of my favorites!

Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2016

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I was dying to read the new version. I have only discovered in the last year that I actually like to re-read books. Anyway, I am so very happy to report that I noticed almost no changes to this story!!!!

Also, I was reminded of how much I really love this book. I believe my original Goodreads rating was 4 or 4 and a half stars, but now Im just going the full 5. I literally laugh out loud during this book. Isis is ridiculously funny. Also, I associate with the strange things she does better than I have probably ever associated with any character ever. Talks out loud to herself? Check. Says statements in the form of questions? Check (though not nearly as frequently as Isis). Call people completely ridiculous names made up on the spot? Check. Her personality is just awesome. As with any novel of this kind, there is a dark time from the main characters past that greatly impacts the way feels about life and the way she treats/trusts people. So she has her weaknesses, even though she is an incredibly strong character that wears a constant brave face.

Then there is Jack Hunter. The Ice Prince.

I love Jack. He is smart and witty and funny and such an ass. The war between him and Isis is so ridiculous and funny. Who doesn't love a good enemies to friends story? Jack also has his own... umm... dark side? He definitely has a dark past. But his is also desperately attempting to be a good person and right his wrongs. But he has a little crazy in him... it's kind of hot.

I definitely cried at least once (maybe more?) during the re-read. The end is heart wrenching, but then you're like WHAT? Oh snap. But then comes the part where I know what happens because, duh, I already read the whole series. BUT WILL IT BE THE SAME? What if they change stuffs? No. I refuse it. They can't do that to us. RIGHT?

One thing I always found strange about this series is that I feel like it is borderline New Adult. There is something grittier about it, with its vulgar language and mature feeling (in the later books especially) that make it stand out above YA. I mean, in the later books they are actually in college and stuff, so YA feels even less right at that point. I would say this series, overall, leans more toward NA. I wouldn't hand this series to a 12 or 13 year old. Unless they remove the things that make it mature. But then I will have to hunt people down and plot revenge and it will be very time consuming and I am lazy, so let's hope that doesn't happen, okay?

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