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Remind me of your gender again
Remind me of your gender again













They both have things they want to get out of the summer and feel that the other is standing in their way of those things. The story is told in 3rd person POV and it focuses on Gus and Maya, alternating each chapter. There was a good set-up for an enemies-to-lovers trope which I was excited about. I enjoyed parts of it and didn't enjoy other parts. I wasn't completely entranced by it, but I didn't hate it either.

remind me of your gender again

They both have things they want to get out of the summer and feel that the other is standing in their wa My feelings for this book are pretty neutral.

remind me of your gender again

My feelings for this book are pretty neutral. Because sometimes it takes someone half a world away to remind you why you’re really here.more Before long, Gus and Maya discover hidden depths to clichéd bucket-lists and secret summer plans. So he devises a list of his own-one guaranteed to send Maya packing, allowing him to enjoy the last of his freedom before he trudges off to agricultural college.īut Maya doesn’t scare that easily and soon sparks fly. Gus has important plans this summer- plans that do NOT involve helping an animal-phobe from the States tick off items on her seriously clichéd must-do list. Like that’s not bad enough, her home-stay host brother Gus clearly wishes she’d landed in somebody else’s sheep paddock. When Maya leaves Chicago armed with an important Aussie must-do list, she assumes she’s heading to Barangaroo with its beautiful Sydney Harbour views-NOT Barangaroo Creek, a fly-ridden, wi-fi dead zone hours from a decent body of water. Like that’s not bad enough, her home-stay host brother Gus clear An Australian to-do list.















Remind me of your gender again