Never Always Sometimes
Never Always Sometimes book cover

Never Always Sometimes

Hardcover – August 4, 2015

Price
$11.55
Format
Hardcover
Pages
320
Publisher
Harlequin Teen
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0373211548
Dimensions
5.83 x 1.1 x 8.48 inches
Weight
1 pounds

Description

From School Library Journal Gr 9 Up—Before they started high school, best friends Dave and Julia made a list of things they'd never do: never go on an epic, life-changing road trip, never dye their hair a color found in the rainbow, and so on. But four years later, high school is about to come to an end and Dave and Julia decide to tackle every single item on the list. They learn that parties and running for prom king can actually be fun, though dyeing your hair can go either way. But while Dave has been violating one item on their list—"never pine silently after someone for the entirety of high school"—all along, someone else has started to catch his eye. Aside from a cringe-worthy subplot when Julia attempts to cross "never hook up with a teacher" off the list, this fun romp will appeal to students looking to push beyond the edges of their own comfort zones. VERDICT For fans of Stephanie Perkins, Jenny Han, and Jennifer E. Smith.—Stephanie Klose, School Library Journal "There is a kernel of truth in every cliché, and Alsaid cracks the teen-lit trope of friends becoming lovers wide open, exposing a beautiful truth inside. He also perfectly captures the golden glow of senioritis, a period when teens are bored and excited and wistful and nostalgic all at once. Everything is possible in this handful of weeks, including making up for squandered time." -Kirkus Reviews, starred review"Alsaid deftly handles Dave's complicated and longstanding feelings for Julia. The clever banter between the two best friends, along with pitch-perfect emotional resonance, makes this book more enduring in spite of its predictability. With all the fun of a classic teen movie, this one should fly off the shelves." -Booklist"This fun romp will appeal to students looking to push beyond the edges of their own comfort zones." -School Library Journal"Exploring universal feelings of friendship and love, Alsaid (Let's Get Lost) offers a colorful depiction of two teens discovering what they have in common with others. Their escapades and realizations will evoke laughter and empathy." -Publishers Weekly"Alsaid's latest takes a really fun look at the question that romantic comedies have asked again and again: Can a man and a woman ever be just friends...the author takes an in-depth look at a fascinating pair of individuals and the messiness of a relationship that develops under dubious circumstances. Julia particularly is a fascinating character; her growth throughout the novel is truly remarkable." -RT Book Reviews"An utterly charming and thoughtful meditation on love, friendship and all the territories in between." -Nicola Yoon, author of Everything, Everything"A refreshing novel about friendship and romance that defies cliché, Never Always Sometimes will win readers over with its hilarious musings and universal truths." -Adam Silvera, author of More Happy Than Not Adi Alsaid was born and raised in Mexico City. He attended college at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. After graduating, he packed up his car and escaped to the California coastline to become a writer. He's now back in his hometown, where he writes, coaches basketball, and makes every dish he eats as spicy as possible. In addition to Mexico, he's lived in Tel Aviv, Las Vegas and Monterey, California. Visit Adi online at www.SomewhereOverTheSun.com, or on Twitter: @AdiAlsaid. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. THE KIDS WALKING past Dave seemed to be in some other universe. They moved too quickly, they were too animated, they talked too loudly. They held on to their backpacks too tightly, checked themselves in tiny mirrors hanging on the inside of their lockers too often, acted as if everything mattered too much. Dave knew the truth: Nothing mattered. Nothing but the fact that when school was out for the day, he and Julia were going to spend the afternoon at Morro Bay.No one had told him that March of senior year would feel like it was made of Jell-O. After he'd received his acceptance letter from UCLA, high school had morphed into something he could basically see through. When, two days later, Julia received her congratulations from UCSB, only an hour up the coastline, the whole world took on brighter notes, like the simple primary colors of Jell-O flavors. They giggled constantly.Julia's head appeared by his side, leaning against the locker next to his. It was strange how he could see her every day and still be surprised by how it felt to have her near. She knocked her head against the locker softly and combed her hair behind her ear. "It's like time has ceased to advance. I swear I've been in Marroney's class for a decade. I can't believe it's only lunch.""here is nothing in here I care about," Dave announced into his locker. He reached into a crumpled heap of papers on top of a history textbook he hadn't pulled out in weeks and grabbed a single, ripped page. "Apparently, I got a C on an art assignment last year." He showed the drawing to Julia: a single palm tree growing out of a tiny half moon of an island in the middle of a turquoise ocean."Don't show UCLA that. hey'll pull your scholarship."Dave crumpled the paper into a ball and tossed it at a nearby garbage can. It careened off the edge and rolled back to his feet. He picked it up and shoved it back into the locker. "Any notable Marroney moments today?""I can't even remember," Julia said, moving aside to make room for Dave's locker neighbor. "he whole day has barely registered." She put her head on Dave's shoulder and let out a sigh. "I think he ate a piece of chalk."It was pleasant torture, how casually she could touch him. Dave kept exploring the wasteland of his locker, tossing out a moldy, half-eaten bagel, occasionally unfolding a sheet of paper with mild curiosity, trying not to move too much so that Julia wouldn't either. He made a pile of papers to throw out and a much smaller one of things to keep. So far, the small pile contained two in-class notes from Julia and a short story he'd read in AP English."Still on for the harbor today?""It's the only thing that's kept me sane," Julia said, pulling away. "Come on, why are we still here? I'm starving. Marroney didn't ofer me any of his chalk.""I do not care about any of this," Dave repeated. Liberated by the absence of her touch, he walked over to the trash can and dragged it toward his locker, then proceeded to shovel in the entirety of the contents except for the books. A USB memory stick was wrapped inside a candy wrapper, covered in chocolate, and he tossed that, too. A few sheets remained tucked into the corners, some ripped pieces stuck under the heavy history textbook.But something caught his eye. One paper folded so neatly that for a second he thought it may have been a note he'd saved from his mom. She'd died when he was nine, and though he'd learned to live with that, he still treated the things she left behind like relics. But when he unfolded the sheet and realized what he was holding, a smile spread his lips. Dave's eyes went down the list to number eight: Never pine silently after someone for the entirety of high school. He looked at Julia, recalling the day they'd made the list, suddenly lushed with warmth at the thought that nothing had come between them in four years. She was holding on to her backpack's straps, starting to get impatient. Everything about Julia was beautiful to him, but it was the side of her face that he loved the most. The slope of her neck, the slight jut of her chin, how the blue in her eyes popped. Her ears, which were the cutest ears on the planet, or maybe the only cute ones ever crafted."David Nathaniel O'Flannery, why are we still here?""How have we been best friends for this long and you still don't know my full name?""I know most of your initials. Can we go, please?""Look at what I just found.""Is it Marroney's mole from sophomore year?""Our Nevers list."Julia turned around to face him. A couple of football players passed between them talking about a party happening on Friday. She was quiet, studying Dave with a raised eyebrow. "You wouldn't lie to me, would you, O'Flannery? I could never forgive you.""Gutierrez. My last name is Gutierrez.""Don't change the subject. Did you really find it?" She motioned for him to hand the paper over, which he did, making sure their ingers would brush. he linoleum hallways were starting to empty out, people were settling into their lunch spots. "I was actually thinking about this the other day. I even wrote my mom about it," Julia said, reading over the list. A smile shaped her lips, which were on the thin side, though Dave couldn't imagine wishing for them to be any different. "We did a pretty good job of sticking to this.""Except for that time you hooked up with Marroney," Dave said, moving to her side and reading the list with her."I wish. He's such a dreamboat."Dave closed his locker and they peered into classrooms they passed by, watching the teachers settle into their lunchtime rituals, doing some grading as they picked at meals packed into Tupperware. Dave and Julia wordlessly stopped in front of Mr. Marroney's room and watched him try to balance a pencil on the end of a yardstick."his is your one regret from high school?""here's a playful charm to him," Julia said, in full volume, though the door was open. "I'm surprised you don't see it." hey stared on for a while, then made their way out toward the cafeteria. he line was at its peak, snaking all the way around the tables and reaching almost to the door. he tables inside the cafeteria and out on the blacktop had long since been claimed. "Kind of cool that we never did get a permanent lunch spot," Dave said, gesturing with the list in hand. "I hadn't even remembered that it was on the list. Had you?""No," Julia said. "he subconscious is weird." She reached into her bag and grabbed a Granny Smith apple, rubbing it halfheartedly on the hem of her shirt. "How do you feel about the gym today?"He shrugged and they walked across the blacktop to the basketball gym tucked behind the soccer ield. hey had a handful of spots they sometimes went to, usually agreeing on a spot wordlessly, both of them headed in the same direction as if pulled by the same invisible string. hey entered the old building, which used to smell of mold until a new court had been installed, so now it smelled like mold and new wood. he walls were painted the school colors: maroon and gold. Next to the banners hanging from the ceiling there was a delated soccer ball pinned to the rafters.Julia led them up the plastic bleachers. A group of kids was shooting around, and one of them looked at Dave and called out to him. "Hey, man, we need one more! You wanna run?""No, thanks," Dave said. "I had a really bad dream about basketball once and I haven't been able to play since." he kid frowned, then looked over at his friends who shook their heads and laughed. Dave took a seat next to Julia as the kids resumed their shooting. "I think you've used that one before," Julia said, taking a bite out of her apple."I'm kind of ofended on your behalf that they don't ask you to play.""hey did once.""Really?" Dave rummaged through his backpack for the Tupperware he'd packed himself in the morning. "Why don't I remember that?""I was really good. Dunked on people. Scored more points than I did on the SAT. Every male in the room suppressed the memory immediately to keep their egos from disintegrating."Dave laughed as he scooped a plastic forkful of chicken and rice. It was a recipe he vaguely remembered from childhood, one he'd found in his mom's old cookbooks and had taught himself to make. His dad and his older brother, Brett, never said anything about it, but the leftovers never lasted more than two days. "So, you've heard from your mom recently?" Julia had been raised by her adoptive fathers, but her biological mom had always lingered on the fringe, occasionally keeping in touch. Julia idolized her, and Dave, who'd been yearning for his mom for years, could never fault her for it."Yeah," Julia said, unable to keep a smile from forming. "She's even been calling. I heard the dads tell her the other day that she's welcome anytime, so there's a chance that a visit is in the works."Dave reached over and grabbed Julia's head, shaking it from side to side. Long ago, in the awkward years of middle school, that had been established as his one gesture of afection when he didn't know how else to touch her. "Julia! hat's great.""You goof, I'm gonna choke on my apple." She shook him of. "I don't want to get my hopes up." "Her hopes should be up. Her biological daughter is awesome.""She's lived in eight countries and has worked with famous painters and sculptors. No ofense, dear friend, but I think her standards for awesome are a little higher than yours."Dave took another forkful of rice and chewed it over slowly, watching the basketball players shoot free throws to decide on teams. "I don't care how great of a life she's led, if she doesn't come visit you she's a very poor judge of awesomeness."He glanced out the corner of his eye at Julia, who set her apple core aside and grabbed a napkin-wrapped sandwich out of her bag. He was waiting to catch that smile of hers, to know he had caused it. Instead, he only saw her eyes lick toward the Nevers list, which was resting folded on his knee. hey turned their attention to the pickup game happening on the court, each eating their lunch languidly.For the last two periods of the day, Dave could feel the seconds ticking by, like bugs crawling on his skin. He reread the Nevers list, smiling to himself at the memory of him and Julia stealing the pen away from each other to write the next item. He gazed out the window at the blue California sky, texted Julia beneath his desk, scowled at the two kids in the back of the room who somehow believed that what they were doing was quiet enough to be called whispering. Next to him, Anika Watson took diligent notes, and he wondered how she was mustering the energy. He wondered how many of the items on the Nevers list she'd done, whether she was going to the Kapoor party that he'd overheard was happening that Friday night. Looking around the room, he imagined a little number popping up above each person's head depicting how many Nevers they'd done.At the final releasing bell of the day, Dave and Julia met up in the hallway, silently making their way out to the parking lot, where Julia's supposedly white Mazda Miata should have been glimmering in the California sun but was barely reflective thanks to the year-long layer of dust she'd never bothered to clean off.Before Julia said anything, Dave knew what she'd been thinking about. He knew her well enough to read her silences, and there'd been only one thing on her mind since he'd found the list. He smiled as she spoke. "What if we did the list?"Dave shrugged and tossed his backpack into her trunk. "Why would we?""Because two more months of this will drive me crazy," Julia said. She unzipped her light blue hoodie and threw it into the car on top of his backpack, then stepped out of her sandals and slipped those into the trunk, too. "We've got nothing left to prove to ourselves. High school didn't change us. Maybe it's time to try out what everyone else has been doing. Just for kicks. God knows we could use some entertaining."It was one of those perfect seventy-five-degree days, more L.A. than San Francisco, though San Luis Obispo was perfectly in between the two cities. A breeze was blowing, and now that Julia was wearing only her tank top it almost tired him how beautiful she was. It'd been a long time of this, keeping his love for her subdued. It'd been a long time of letting her rest her head on his shoulder during their movie nights, of letting her prop her almostalways bare feet on his lap, his hands nonchalantly gripping her ankles. He'd been a cliché all four years of high school, in love with his best friend, pining silently.He opened the passenger door and looked across the roof ofJulia's car, which was more brown than white, covered with raindrop-shaped streaks of dirt, though it hadn't rained in weeks. "I hear there's a party at the Kapoors' on Friday."Julia beamed a smile at him. "Look at you. In the know.""I'm an influential man, Ms. Stokes. I'm expected to keep up with current events."Julia snorted and plopped herself down into the driver's seat. "So, no Friday movie night, then? We're going to a party? With beers in red plastic cups and Top 40 music being blasted and kids our age? People hooking up in upstairs bedrooms and throwing up in the bushes outside and at least one girl running out in tears?""Presumably," Dave said. "I've never actually been to a party, so I have no idea if that's what happens."Julia lowered the top of the car, then pulled out of the school's parking lot and turned right, headed toward California One and the harbor at Morro Bay."So, we're doing this?" Dave asked. "We're gonna join in on what everyone else has been doing?""Why not?" Julia said, and Dave couldn't help but smile at the side of her face, the way the sun made her eyes impossibly blue, how he could see her mom on her thoughts. "I'll come over before the party so we can decide what we're going to wear.""And we can talk about how drunk we're gonna get," Dave added."And who we're gonna make out with.""Yup."Dave turned to face the road and sank into his seat. He lowered the mirror visor and stuck his arm out the side of the car, feeling the sun on his skin. He kept smiling, too experienced at hiding to let the tiny heartbreak show. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Never date your best friend
  • Always be original
  • Sometimes rules are meant to be broken
  • Best friends Dave and Julia were determined to never be cliché high school kids—the ones who sit at the same lunch table every day, dissecting the drama from homeroom and plotting their campaigns for prom king and queen. They even wrote their own Never List of everything they vowed they'd never,
  • ever
  • do in high school.
  • Some of the rules have been easy to follow, like #5,
  • never die your hair a color of the rainbow
  • , or #7,
  • never hook up with a teacher
  • . But Dave has a secret: he's broken rule #8,
  • never pine silently after someone for the entirety of high school
  • . It's either that or break rule #10,
  • never date your best friend
  • . Dave has loved Julia for as long as he can remember.
  • Julia is beautiful, wild and impetuous. So when she suggests they do every Never on the list, Dave is happy to play along. He even dyes his hair an unfortunate shade of green. It starts as a joke, but then a funny thing happens: Dave and Julia discover that by skipping the clichés, they've actually been missing out on high school. And maybe even on love.
  • Check out Adi Alsaid's bestselling novel
  • Let's Get Lost
  • . Five strangers. Countless adventures. One epic way to get lost.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(198)
★★★★
25%
(165)
★★★
15%
(99)
★★
7%
(46)
23%
(153)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A story that wasn't even worth telling

If you're going to write a book about best friends being in love with one another and make it a huge mess (every YA novel ever?) then at least give me an ending with some closure. This book is 300 pages (I think) and we are in the same place we started except we aren't virgins anymore. Spoilers: because I can't express how stupid it all is without them.

I went into this book knowing that Dave was going to be a lovesick puppy dog. I accepted it. I went on that journey from his perspective and accepted that he was in love with Julia (literally the worst human being on planet earth). I even found his crush/lust/instalove for Gretchen to not be vomit-inducing. Dave starts to move on and be okay with just being friends with his best friend, even gets himself a girlfriend, then he gets dragged back in because Julia is the worst human being on the planet.

The Julia section was thankfully short-lived. And because I liked Dave and wanted to see him happy, you get all the feelings when they finally sleep together. And awesome, since he is in a relationship with someone else, there will be a different approach to how this will play out. There's some good angst and growth (Julia stops being the worst for a little bit there) and Dave and Julia call it quits after a week of sex because their relationship is tainted by Dave's feelings for Gretchen.

All of this is plausible and I wasn't even mad until the end. Something that got this messed up, this quickly, will not fix that easily. Gretchen- who was previously cheated on- would not get back together with Dave, no matter how sweet he is. He slept with his best friend who he was in love with for 4 years. It is going to happen again (anyone who says differently is a liar). You do not come back from that. Also: They're seniors in high school, so this relationship is going to flame out by August anyway, so what's the point of trying to resurrect it? Let. it. go.

Brett's crush on Julia is stupid and unnecessary. Stupid and unnecessary.

And you're kidding me with Dave and Julia patching things up so easily, right? Right? Oh, no, no you're not? Well, that's garbage. Yes, they're BFF and they love each other ("just not in that way") blah, blah, blah but neither of them has shown the emotional maturity to back-up what happens at the end of this book.

Had Alsaid flash-forwarded to Dave and Julia going into their senior year of college after three years of separate growth (read: three years of Julia figuring out how to not be the worst and Dave figuring out what he deserves) and they realize that they are MFEO then I would've been down. But no, we're going to play the "we love each other but we aren't meant to love each other that way" card and it's just not satisfying or realistic or frankly, a story worth telling.
27 people found this helpful
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Not My Favorite by Far...

I prefer not to give out ratings lower than 3/5, but I just did not enjoy this book.
Perhaps it was the hype surrounding it, that my expectations were too high, but I just did not like Never Always Sometimes. I felt the main characters were too cliche and the entire book was just filled with tropes (something I usually am not against for they are usually fun, but I digress). The two main characters were walking cliches and very hard to like (I especially did not like Julia. She seemed very immature and just not a person I would want to be around).
I also didn't like the little character development there was. /Spoilers: One second Dave is all in love with Julia then he suddenly is over her? Really? Although, I did like how eventually Julia got over herself and could pass for a decent human being./
In the end, I give it a 1.5/5. I hate not liking a book. I hate having complaints. I want to support authors more than anything in the world because what they do is so hard, yet I can't make myself think any higher of this book. It just wasn't what I hoped.
5 people found this helpful
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Boring with a dash of aggravating characters

Warning: there are massive amounts of ranting and spoilerage ahead...read at thy own risk...

I totally expected to love Never Always Sometimes, mainly because I've heard/read great things about Alsaid's Let's Get Lost. Plus, I really liked the whole concept of a Nevers List and of then attempting to do those nevers. Unfortunately for me, Never Always Sometimes was an extremely big bust in terms of well...everything.

Let's start with the pacing. This is one of those times that I wish I could allow myself to dnf a review book (although this one didn't come in an ARC form, but rather an actual hardcover) because I was so bored reading Never Always Sometimes. The beginning of this book was coma-inducing boring. The middle of this book was improved so that it was merely boring. It stayed that way until the ending where I had to deal with not only it's dullness, but with its trying-to-not-be-cliche-but-failing-miserably-in still-being-cliche ending (more on that in a bit).

The main reason that I found Never Always Sometimes boring was because Dave was such a blah character. This guy needed someone to buy him a personality, ASAP. I thought that this book would improve once we switched to Julia's POV, but it didn't; mainly because, while you have Dave being boring in one corner, you have Julia being a complete jerk in the other. Here's the thing: I hate the whole teacher/student thing with a fiery passion and want that trope to die a painful death. What made it even worse here is that it's not consensual. The teacher isn't giving Julia any type of signal, but she still sets out to seduce him to the point of harassment, so that she can fulfill a checkpoint on some arbitrary list and I'm still supposed to root for her?! No! She was clearly unstable and should've been arrested for sexual harassment.

Then, you have Dave getting some semblance of a personality and branching out (which is the only time I liked him) by dating Gretchen, whom he then proceeds to dump, but not before getting together and sleeping with Julia. And that would've been fine (well, not fine, but I would've been less annoyed), except that then Dave starts thinking he made the wrong choice. I'm supposed to believe that after years of pining for Julia and then finally getting her, he's going to be all torn up and having second thoughts about Gretchen after knowing her for two weeks (and after cheating on her with Julia)? Uh, nope. I call bull. Oh, and the whole thing with Brett, I saw coming from a mile away.

So, no, I did not like Never Always Sometimes. It was predictable, cliched (you can not have a love triangle in a YA novel and NOT be cliche. Sorry, but that's the rule of the land, according to me), and it wasn't that well-written. It was also the farthest thing from compelling. By skipping it, you won't be missing much.
3 people found this helpful
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a more emotional book than I thought it would be.

3.5/5

Never Always Sometimes is a young adult book by Adi Alsaid. This was my first time reading Adi’s works and I have to say Never Always Sometimes was much more emotional than I was expecting it to be. This book tugged on my heartstrings man. Never Always Sometimes is the story of Dave and Julia, two best friends. I loved that the story was broken up into a Dave section, then a Julia section, and then Dave and Julia sections. By giving the reader larger chunks of multiple chapters in a row of one perspective, rather than alternating every chapter, it really gives you a chance to get to know Dave and Julia’s very different personalities.

Never Always Sometimes starts out right before Dave and Julia begin high school. They decide to make a list of “nevers”. Things that they never want to do in high school. (you all know how much I love a good list.) Then the story jumps ahead to their senior year, and not much has changed. Dave and Julia are still best friends and they still consider themselves to be different than most of their peers. Never mind that fact that by wanting to avoid all stereotypes, they kind of became a stereotype themselves. (but then again, that is kind of how I see hipsters, so it was fitting for the kind of hipster vibe I was getting from Dave and Julia. But I digress.) Dave finds the list of Nevers when he was cleaning out his locker, and they decide to do a social experiment of sorts (first people in the history of high school to have this idea. I think ever.) and check off every item on their list. And that is the set up for Never Always Sometimes. Kind of cliche, kind of cute, lots of promise.

The great thing about Never Always Sometimes is the emotion that Adi Alsaid is able to evoke with his writing. He takes this cute, but a little cliche idea of a list of things to accomplish before high school with you best friend, and also secret crush, and turns it into a really poignant story of love heartbreak, friendship and growing up. I loved all the feels that Adi Alsaid was able to bring out in me. I was just expecting this to be a fun cute read. And it was, but it was also really heartbreaking. And happy. And nostalgic. Never Always Sometimes is so many things. There are things that I wanted to turn out differently, sure, but looking back on the book as a whole, I don’t know that I would have changed anything. Never Always Sometimes is a special read.

*Disclaimer- I got a copy of this book for free in exchange for my honest thoughts. I was not compensated for my review.
3 people found this helpful
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Liked the concept. The execution? Not so much

In an effort to avoid being just another cliche, Dave and Julia make a list before starting high school of ten things they will never do. They won't be defined by where they eat lunch. You will never see either one of them at a drunken party and so on. Fast forward to senior year where the two teens find themselves bored and desperate for entertainment. Upon rediscovering the list they decide to do each of the things they vowed never to do.

I was a huge fan of Adi Alsaid's debut novel, Let's Get Lost, and I was looking forward to Never Always Sometimes. Conceptually - I love the idea. There's bound to be drama, trouble, romantic entanglements and all sorts of fun where you have two characters following a list of somewhat ridiculous teenage cliches.

But this book fell short of my expectations. Dave and Julia, despite hating teenage stereotypes, were the typical lovesick best friend and manic pixie dream girl. I feel like this was intentionally ironic as an attempt to show that by rejecting cliches the characters became one themselves but I didn't understand the characters' motivations. I didn't connect with either of them and found the plot rather predictable. I think this book was trying to capture the whimsy and bittersweetness of a John Green novel yet it slightly missed the mark.

This book took a very long time to get interesting. I found my attention drifting up until I got three-quarters of the way in. I enjoyed where the story when in the last few chapters but it took a little too long to get there. Having all ten rules on the Never list stated so early in the novel left the reader knowing what to expect. It wasn't until things started to get a little messy and different that Dave and Julia came into their own. There were some nice touches which made me laugh but there were also times where I thought the characters took things a little too far.

I still consider Adi Alsaid to be an author to be on the look out for but Never Always Sometimes left me a little cold.
2 people found this helpful
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Wish I'd just totally skipped this one.

Here's the thing. I should have DNF'ed this book. I rated it 2 stars, but I think I should have saved myself the time. It wasn't bad. I think a lot of contemporary fans will love it. And I was so anticipating it - I get frustrated when everyone on the planet seems to be in love with their best friend, but I do love the trope. I was hoping for something like Emmy & Oliver, with a super cute and adorable romance in addition to the real life problems. But I was just . . . bored with this one.

Julia and Dave. Dave and Julia. Best friends - but Dave has been pining after Julia for years. In the beginning, you get to see Julia through Dave's eyes, and it's really lovely. And then they decide, in a last hurrah, to do all the things they said they'd never do in high school right before they graduate.

A love triangle quickly comes into play, and honestly, I just . . . didn't enjoy it. It's very bittersweet, because here you have Dave, who's been pining for his best friend from page one. So you get invested in that relationship. They clearly have a very close relationship and there's plenty of snark between them. And then along comes Gretchen, sweet and nice. And it makes sense, really. I can't expect every book to have a happily ever after, because that's not how life works. You don't always end up with your first love.

But this is fiction, and I WANT MY HEA, GODDAMMIT. And I never want a love triangle, obviously. It was one that definitely hurt my heart a little bit.

And for me, the writing just didn't bring anything to life. It wasn't bad. But for me, it basically put me to sleep. Nothing came alive, and it was just so, so disappointing. I found myself skimming far too often and basically praying for the end. And that's when you know you need to DNF a book. But I clung because I wanted to see how it ended. I continually had to force myself to pick it up. And sure, it didn't take me all that long to finish, but that was partly because of the skimming and partly because I had three days off of work, so I would set the book down for two hours and force myself to pick it up again.

tl;dr: It was boring. And disappointing. Skip it unless you really really loved Let's Get Lost, and then try it out. But make better decisions than I did. If you're as bored as I was, just DNF it and move on to something more interesting. 2 stars.
2 people found this helpful
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Enjoyable, but not a favorite

The thing I love most about Adi Alsaid’s books is the passion he has for them. The first time I met him he was doing press for his debut book Let’s Get Lost. When he talked about the book you could tell he genuinely loved his book and what he does. Because of this (and because I enjoyed his debut) I was really excited for Never Always Sometimes. And truth be told, I really enjoyed this one too. Did I think it had some flaws? Sure. But when it came down to it I thought the story and emotions were strong.

Never Always Sometimes is about Dave and Julia. They have been friends for a long time and refuse to turn into a cliché when they enter high school. So they make a list of things they will never do, a list that they have managed to stay away from for 3 full years. But as the navigate Senior year and life begins to feel too mundane Julia suggests they do all the nevers. Suddenly feeling like they are in a rut Julia decides it to time they do all the nevers. But as the rules they had abided by for 3 years start to disappear boundaries open and things change. Dave and Julia find themselves in uncharted territory and have no clue if they will make it out intact on the other side.

Action
I’m a sucker for list stories. Anything that has a list and I’m in. I like the structure of it. I like how you can see things be crossed off and have a feeling of accomplishment. The plot of Never Always Sometimes is based solely on a list and that list changes the path of the main characters. In all honesty that was my favorite part of the book. I loved seeing how each item changed things between the main characters. Even something as simple as dying hair sent them on a path that was unexpected and that was fantastic.

Backdrop
This story took place in a lot of different settings. It almost felt like a road trip where the reader was never in one place for two long. We were in high school and in a tree house and on a beach and at the water front. I felt like the backdrop was constantly moving but not at a way that was overwhelming. It actually fit the story in a perfect kind of way.

Characters
I guess this is where the struggle came in and it happened for 2 reasons. 1) Never Always Sometimes suffered from a dual POV. The book was really strong in the beginning when it was just told from Dave’s side. I liked him as a character, I liked him as best friends with Julia, I liked him as a person. He was a good narrator/story teller and I found it refreshing to see the inside of his head and what he was thinking. But then after about half the book was done we were given a dual POV of Julia and Dave. This didn’t work for me. It didn’t see natural or organic. I really just wanted to know what Dave was thinking and feeling more than Julia. Which brings us to reason 2; Julia. She wasn’t as developed as Dave. I didn’t like her as much because I didn’t know her as much. I didn’t understand why she did some of the things she did. I had no idea why she wanted to work on the Nevers list. And I sure as hell didn’t understand her attachment to a certain family member. By having me listen to her POV without knowing her it kind of took away from what I loved about the book.

Final Thoughts
All in all I did enjoy Never Always Sometimes. It used a familiar troupe (I won’t say what it was) but did something a little different with it, something I hadn’t read in other books. Even not liking some aspects I enjoyed it for what it was and enjoyed Dave as a character. Are there things I would have changed? Definitely. But I think it is one giving a shot. You never know, what bugged me you may love. A solid second book.
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Fun and easygoing

Hands down my favorite part of this book is the wonderful banter and chemistry (friend chemistry or romantic chemistry – both were wonderful) between Dave and Julia. I laughed out loud SO MANY times. They got along so well and had so many silly inside jokes that I fell in love with them right away. My favorite part was how Julia kept calling Dave by any name except for his actual one (Dave Gutierrez turns to David Beth Kacinski or David Babycakes Howard or David Sporkful McGee – definitely the silliest). I laughed. Every. Single. Time.

There’s also a road trip, which you guys know I love. I can’t give too many details about the road trip without giving away a few spoilers, but I’ll just say there are beaches and music and wonderfulness all around. Most of the novel felt a lot like the road trip – easygoing, fun, quick, and enjoyable.
I also really appreciated the outcome of Never Always Sometimes. I think it’s going to be one of those you either love it or hate it endings, but I loved it. It’s realistic and felt honest and truthful to the characters.

I did have a few issues with the book. For a book about avoiding clichés, it ended up having a few clichés in its plot and characters – the main one of which was the love triangle, which you guys know I’m not a fan of. I could’ve also done with a few more surprises/plot twists. The Nevers list is introduced really early in the book, so it’s easy to predict what Dave and Julia will do in their attempt to cross off each Never. Despite that, I did really enjoy following Dave and Julia’s journey of clichés.

The bottom line: Never Always Sometimes is a fun and fast novel overflowing with great banter, silly nicknames, an easygoing writing style, and a realistic and genuine ending. Despite my few issues with it, I thought it was a great read. Check it out if you love wit, road trips, honest endings, and/or easy to read books.
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When a book full of cliches is GOOD! :)

I'm always intrigued when it comes to high school novels and romance and NEVER ALWAYS SOMETIMES was one that I had my eyes on when I first discovered it was going to be published! With realistic characters you will root for and a storyline where you'll wonder which girl should he end up with, NEVER ALWAYS SOMETIMES keeps the pace up for a great read. A list of NEVERS turns into kind of a dare for best friends Julia and Dave as senior year draws near and the changes that occur as they cross off the items on their list will either bring them closer or tear them apart. A satisfying teen read!
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Fun Concept

Longtime friends Dave and Julia create a list of Nevers or cliches they never want to experience or do but come senior year they begin to realize how much they have missed out on and decide to complete every Never on the list.

The concept behind NEVER ALWAYS SOMETIMES is a fun one, I really liked the idea of the Nevers list and enjoyed experiencing (and reminiscing about) some enjoyable and memorable high school moments right alongside the main characters.

Dave and Julia themselves are very personable and have a great dynamic with each other, throwing around humorous banter and overall just complementing each other. There is a love triangle that lead to a lot of drama, but I liked how it was wrapped up.

The writing is very easy to get into, and it flows well with the story. However, there were some pacing issues and I wish more time had been spent on romantic development and less on angst and parties.

My favorite aspect of this novel was how it did not end like I expected. It is refreshing to read a contemporary novel like this where you cannot immediately predict the endgame.

Overall, NEVER ALWAYS SOMETIMES is a novel that fans of the genre will enjoy.
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