


It was hard for me to accept that Julie wouldn't have a major melt down and freak out on her. I know people like that in real life and I don't like them. As fun as she was spurring them on to try new things, her inability to listen and accept what people tell her was incredibly annoying. Her inability to accept that things were not as she thought they were.even when she was told repeatedly that they weren't was frustrating to say the least. On the other hand, Ashleigh just about drove me insane. I found Julie's father and step-mother irritating, but I can forgive them because they were meant to be. As one might expect, there were plenty of mixed signals, poor communication, and of course love triangles that are happily resolved by the end of the book. Ashleigh is surely one of her silly younger sisters, I can't imagine who else she would be modeled after. Darcy and stays silent on her true feelings in her attempt to protect others. Julie is our "Elizabeth," our heroine who lusts after her Mr. She's worried that Ashleigh's insistence to no longer wear pants (it's not proper to show off your lower limbs), talk like she's in an Austin novel, and to crash the private boys school fall dance might just put her over the edge this time. Sure her love is understated and much more personal, but she wants to maintain it just the same. Julie is justifiably worried that Ashleigh's enthusiasm will taint her own love of Jane Austin. Then she co-opts Julie's love of Jane Austin and this time she may have gone too far. My best friend and next-door neighbor, Ashleigh Marie Rossi, is an Enthusiast."Īshleigh goes all out for whatever happens to capture her imagination at the moment, be it candy making, a certain band, or literature. "There is little more likely to exasperate a person of sense than finding herself tied by affection and habit to an Enthusiast.
