![]() The eyebrows killed me in the movie adaptation and now they are haunting me in the books. Or how much I have to imagine Emilia Clarke and her eyebrows as being Lou. The basics were down for me either way, but reading Still Me, some memories of After You came back and that was nice.įor example, like the memory of how annoying Lou can be. But gladly, the information wasn’t needed because the necessary details were provided within the story. Having read After You, the novel before Still Me, in 2016, I didn’t quite know a lot of details. ![]() It ended in a way that meant to have either another continues novel or no novel at all. Again, I don’t have the feeling that there might be another novel, but who knows. ![]() I didn’t quite know at the beginning if I even wanted to read it since the last book didn’t leave me with a feeling that it was highly necessary to continue with the story. This third installment crept up on me because suddenly it was there. Juggling her new and exciting life in New York, with her exhausting but interesting job and her heart back in England, Lou finds that she finally seems to live a life she didn’t know she wanted but highly needed. Being apart from her newly found boyfriend Sam, her sister, family, and Lily, Will’s daughter, doesn’t appear to be as hard as it seems in the first moment, but certainly takes on a challenge to be accomplished. Louisa Clark moves to New York City for her new job as an assistant to a rich family’s wife. ![]()
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