Before I Fall
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My Rant About This Book...


Such a great book!



I love what u said!!!! But I always wanted to read this.... Ugh! Sam was soooo annoying at first, but i loved that she changed. This is totally worth buying and I recommend to almost everyone(= Juliet Sykes is probably the spokeswoman for about 1-2 million teenage girls. Kent.... Poor poor Kent... He'd been nothing but nice to Sam and she jsut spit at his feet. I wish Sam lived so they could go on....)=

I hated Rob like I never hated anyone before. He was such a crappy person! Sam definitely deserved better, and by the time she realized this it was (unfortunately) too late. I love her and Kent, each scene with them together, be it good or bad, made my heart beat faster and all I could think about was "Are they going to kiss?" And even though Sam frustrated me, I suppose this is how teens with her little status act/think (I wouldn't know, I'm not popular like her), which made the character seem even more realistic in my mind.
So yeah, I completely agree with your little rant. The book was frustrating, and I was skeptical about it at first, but I will never regret buying the book.

Rob is the most irritating, rude, selfish person i've ever even read about. Unfortuneately (however you spell that) i know someone like that. The sad thing is is that he is really popular. Why is it that if people are mean, they are immediatly an interest to be popular? What good does it do if you are constantly rude to people and don't care about anything but yourself? No good at all. I jsut can't wait until he's older and he gets a taste of his own medicine when no one wants to be around him. I cannot tell you how many times i've just wanted to turn around and knock his creepy little smile off his face. You know what i mean?? Sorry I'm going off like this, I'm sure you could care less(= haha, but we all have someone in our lives like this. Even some of US are like this....

I am so fortunate to not know someone like this, though there's no doubt that there's probably someone like this at my school. To whoever is friends with a person like Rob, I kind of feel sorry for them. I hated Rob so much, I almost threw the book across the room, he irritated me so much. It sucks that you know someone like Rob, and it sucks even more that he's popular. It won't help him later in life, and his future boss (if he's hired at all) won't really care if he was popular during high school. Honestly, I don't know if I'm talking about the guy you know or about Rob anymore, but my opinion stands the same. I know exactly what you mean though, people like Rob annoy me to death. And I REALLY hope I'm not like that, cause then this whole post would be a bit hypocritical >_>



(SPOILER)
I think the hard time I had with the ending of this book was the fact that Sam was ACTUALLY dead, all along. It's like, was her re-doing the same day over simply her being in some sort of limbo? Does that mean everything she did that last day doesn't count for anything? If that's the case then Sam ACTUALLY dies as the person she was on the first day of the book... and that Sam I did not like. That's not how I wanted Sam to be remembered. I wanted to be able to see what happened to the rest of the world when it finally hit Saturday, February 13th. But it never did. I loved the middle & the thought put into the book by Lauren Oliver. But I hated the beginning, and I absolutely hated the end. Call me a sucker for happy endings, but I just didn't feel complete when finishing this book. I felt like the author took my heart somewhere in the middle, and never gave it back at the end. What happens to Kent? Of all the people he was the purest and the most lovable, and that's what I still feel like I need to know.

I think I'm the first male to respond in this particular thread, and so let me offer this criticism: every single male in the book (with the one exception of Kent) is painted in a very negative light. And every single female is given enough information that the reader can, at minimum, understand the character.
Therefore, I do take exception to the comments about this being totally "realistic". I don't believe the "jerk-ratio" is as high for males as it is portrayed.

Hi! Great review! You verbalized everything I was thinking but unable to express so fluently!

I'm sure you're not like this!! And yeah, it does really suck to know someone like this... But you're right about the boss not really caring if he wsa popular or not. His popularity now won't really help him in the long run. But for now it sure is! Haha. But none of my friends are close to him, so I don't have to talk to him (more like put up with him) every day. So thank God for that!!

yeah... there are a lot of really sweet guys. Most of my closest friends are. But, there are those ten or twenty guys that you just wonder how they even have friends. So, sorry if I ever said anything about males that was totally negative and unrealistic. I don't think I have, but just in case!

Thank God indeed!! If it's helping him right now, great, but like I said before, it won't help him in the long run. I probably wouldn't be able to last five minutes in the same room as someone like Rob....


I completely agree with you. It changed my entire outlook on life.

i agree.i didnt know if i was going to like it.so i went on amazon and read some pages.finally made up my mind and checked it out at the library.it was awesome.

That would not make sense though. Since technically Sam is the only one who realizes she is reliving the same day over and over. She is the one to learn a lesson not Kent.

I mean why does it even matter to Sam if she ‘saved’ Juliet on the seventh day? I mean Juliet does not get to live anyways. Remember, she killed herself after the party. So it’s her destiny to die. No point in saving at all. They BOTH DIE eventually.
These are just some of my thoughts regarding the book. Though I really LOOOVED it- the characterization, the entirety of it- I’m still boggled with the ‘saving-Juliet-ending’.

As others have said, after the first couple of days I wanted to toss the book aside, but I stuck with it and I was glad I did. I really enjoyed Sam's growth as a character, and even the depth Lauren Oliver gave to Lindsay through revealling her motivations.
The ending took me completely by surprise, although it makes sense in a purgatory type setting - Sam learned what she needed to and was able to ascend to the afterlife.
I liked what Oliver says about how last things are more important when you know they are the last things, but knowing makes them more difficult to let go of. Very powerful.

Not only that, but a lot about the book was really unrealistic and I hated the last line of the book when it says "and you'll have to find out the rest for yourself..." Thats an ending that a second grader could write.... just saying.
Didn't really like this book but it was OK.
I hope that Delerium is better because it is on my "To Read" shelf...


That would not make sense though. Since technically Sam is the only one who realizes she is reliving the same d..."
It would make sense if he woke up as the same day too. No need to get rude.

I actually preferred Replay, by Ken Grimwood, couldn't get into "before I fall".
This whole "I live the perfect live and still hate the world and all the people in it because I despise myself" attitude that the kids in this book show is just too far away for me to be still able to connect with it.
I have to agree with Tim, the book casts boys (and men) in a bad light - but then again, I guess it is the natural selection that girls as this would draw, and we do get to see the world solely through Sam's eyes.
Sabrina wrote: "I thought that the match up of Kent and Sam was just to unrealistic."
At the better moments in the book they stroke me as characters like the late John Hughes could have written, especially Kent in his fancy dress up and with his undying hope (and love) for Sam - this unrewarded loyality to her.
They would have made a "Breakfast Club" couple who we, and they, know can't last and yet we have to smile and love it that the underdog got under the skin of the popular girl. :)

The truest part of the novel is certainly the circular reasoning.
"We get away with everything because we are popular, and we are popular because we get away with everything."
It's sad, but that is in a nutshell how the world works.

I thought Juliet and Sam died together ?

No, far as I skimmed the end Sam pushes her out of the way before she gets hit.

No, far as I skimmed the end Sam pushes her out of the way before she gets hit."
I'll probably have to skim the ending later on then.

It was definitly a life changing story.


Great description of how this book makes you feel! Wow! I want to show this post to my teens and say, look take a chance on this book and it actually may make you think about what you say before YOU slam another person down. Thanks for sharing!

Great! No Problem!



But i really liked this book because it was thought provoking. It makes you appreciate Life and you realise how it can go in a couple of seconds. You also think about your actions, and it consequences; good or bad.


Yeah i didn't like how she died too.. But, i think the point of the novel is to show we can die at anytime, so we should live life to the full ")


IKR? Why the heck would she make Kent suffer like that?

It's kind of true. It was an interesting read, but at first I couldn't get into it, and the ending just killed it. I probably wouldn't have hated it as much if they hadn't had Kent in the story. I am SUCH a romantic, and a sucker for happy endings.

I really wish she had lived just so we could see if anything actually changed.

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I absolutely hated Sam. Sam was the girl that I couldn't stand in high school, the self absorbed, the world revolves around me and my perfect life type. As much as I hated her, I couldn't stop reading. I wanted her to change, I wanted her to be different but she was so insecure and so caught up on appearances it crippled her and it angered me. It angered me because reading from her narrative, I knew she could do better but was too afraid to stand up for herself.
Like everyone else, I expected her to get 7 tries and *tadaaaa* she'd wake up and get her life back as a redeemed citizen. Lauren Oliver had other plans. The more I hated Sam, the more pity I had for her and the people around her. It made he realize that everyone is struggling with some kind of demon, and that bullying is a HUGE deal and something so little could change things so great.
I wanted Juliette to live. I wanted her to just take Sam's advice and go home, but she didn't. I love how Lauren made everything so realistic because for some people, unfortunately, suicide seems like the only way out. I was so surprised to find myself crying at the end. Sam FINALLY got some common sense and you think everything is going to be okay, but you can't put a band aid on a gaping wound. I was so conflicted with this book! I was angry, I was hopeful, I was intrigued. I don't think I've ever thought of any other novel this way. You go into a story knowing who you hate, who you like, etc. With this book, I can't even tell you. Although I definitely hated Rob. He was a douche.
Lauren Oliver's novel is written so beautifully and so realistically that it's hard to believe it's her first novel. I never thought that buying this novel would completely change the way I view things and view people. It showed be how to accept things as they are, change what I can, and try to find the best in people.