"I'd spent so much time avoiding Julia Baker that I'd never really looked at her, and now all of a sudden I couldn't stop." She, on the other hand, starts seeing him for what he really is-egocentric and obnoxious (a normal male teen, actually). But, all of a sudden, wham, Bryce takes a new look at Juli, when her picture's in the paper for trying to save her tree from being cut down, and he flips for her. And if that's all the author did in this story, it would still be enjoyable. Comparing and contrasting their wildly divergent takes on the same events is hilarious and revealing-the whole Women from Venus, Men from Mars thing. Still walking around with my first kiss," Juli sighs. And there's popular, dreamy Bryce, his hair smelling of watermelon. There's Juli, sitting high up in her favorite sycamore tree, surveying the neighborhood. Honestly, one look at him and I became a lunatic. For her to back off-you know, just give me some space." And the second, setting up the pattern of chapters in the two alternating voices, by Juli: "The first day I met Bryce Loski, I flipped. The first, narrated by Bryce: "All I've ever wanted is for Juli Baker to leave me alone. I love everything about this insightful book, including the first sentences of each of the first two chapters. Bryce Loski describes how he has scrambled, ever since second grade when his family moved to the neighborhood, to avoid all contact with his pesty, oddball neighbor, Julianna Baker while Juli recalls the past six years of being smitten with and pursuing blue-eyed Bryce, hoping he would kiss her.
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