Member Reviews
I did not expect to love this as much as I did but oh, what a ride. Beautiful art, a compelling story, and a really important message. I adored this, highly recommend it.
Adored the art and especially how the women were drawn, with realistic bodies and stomach rolls. The story wasn't fully clear at times - it would occasionally randomly cut to the perspective of one of Viola's friends and I wasn't sure why. Easy quick summer read but in the end, slightly shallow and wasn't much plot, and some things (especially other characters and relationships) were unclear
Viola wonders what love is exactly and questions the love presented in its many forms during her summer vacation in Italy with family and friends. A great coming of age story about discovering yourself and doing what feels right instead of what one is expected to do. This was a great story and beautifully illustrated.
At first I thought this was going to be a book about teen crushes based on the opening artwork in a diary-like form and thought uh-oh! But looking back now after reading the whole book, it was a clever addition.
I would recommend this for a quick YA summer read! A very enjoyable graphic novel!
Thank you to NetGalley for the chance to read this one in exchange for an honest review.
This is an honest review, I received this book from NetGalley.
It might be that I really miss Italy and the sea but I really liked this graphic novel!
Viola is a girl that has not yet discovered what and who she wants to be. This is a coming of age novel that through friendship and love help Viola to understand a little bit more both of the world and herself.
Viola spends her days wondering what Love is. Each or her friends define it in a different way and even her mother has her own opinion. It will be the meeting with 2 lesbian ladies and a local guy that will finally uncover the mystery about this strange feeling that everyone apart for her seem to have felt.
Great book, I really recommend it!
The book was such a pleasant read while talking about issues that are so important, especially for people just starting to explore relationships and love and their sexuality. Her ease with an older queer couple was so well placed and comfortable.
The visuals are stunning (ref: forest and field scenes) and the colours in the book transport you to Italy immediately.
Forever follows Viola, a young girl who is in her with her family and friends on summer vacations where she begins exploring many new relationships. This book was such a real and raw portrayal of love and relationships. In such a short book readers are able to see the good, the bad, and the real things people go through during their relationships. Seeing this book through the eyes of Viola was great because she is just starting to figure out herself and being exploring sexuality and romance. I loved seeing her find a summer love she didn’t expect and I even enjoyed seeing her stand up for herself when it came to the boy she thought she had wanted. Side note: Paola and Lili were the absolute best. I loved how they promoted happy and healthy relationships and I love how they helped Viola throughout the book!
I feel that this is a great book for young adults to read who are at the age where they will start getting into romantic relationships on their own. This book shows both healthy and unhealthy relationships and shows what can come from the both of them. I think this book could be a great way for young adults to start conversations with their families or friends about what can make a good relationship and what could not.
In terms of the actual layout/format of the book, I absolutely loved it. The illustrations where beautiful and it was one of my favorite styles of artwork (also what I feel to be one of the most universally favored of graphic novel readers). I really enjoyed the amount of text, it was just the right amount. Not too much or too little which is something I think many graphic novels struggle with.
Overall I was pleasantly surprised by this book and I highly recommend it for all the young adults/preteens in your life!
A beautiful study of love.
I first, after reading the beginning and seeing the typical annoying crush on the cute guy and horrible love cliches that seem to linger in teen magazines, I thought this was not for me.
But I was wrong, so very wrong. This is a very beautiful graphic novel that really does question what it is to be in love, what it should feel like, what it evokes and what it means when we are young, when we are older, when it starts and when it ends. It touches on deep topics, on identity, on the importance of loving yourself and being good in your own skin. It is geared towards girls, a message, reassurance and a boost to keep you strong.
I didn't think I would like it so much, but I really did. A fantastic read.
'maybe this is what "love is forever" means: it's not timeless, but it leaves a mark so deep that it accompanies us all our lives.'
i may have just become a sucker for cute graphic novels which leave me asking for more but aaahhh why was this one way too short? ://
forever was so heartwarming and i was smiling almost all the time. the beach setting illustrations, especially the viola-ireneo scenes and the music playing in the background were beautiful, like really beautiful. though a bit unsatisfying, this one's short, sweet and feel-good max <3
"Love is either forever or it isn't"
This is a beautiful story about loving one self before loving someone else.
Many myths about true love are covered in this graphic novel as much as other issues like body image, self worth, family problems, sexuallity, misunderstandings, free will and friendship.
I very much loved the main character and felt myself reflexed in many of her points of view and actions.
Beautifully illustrated and the feeling is so full of peace that you for a moment feel like in a faraway coast in Italy, falling in love for the first time.
Grazie, Netgalley
In Forever, we meet Viola, a teenager girl that wondering what love really is, especially apout what "love is forever" is trully mean while spending summer vacation with her bestfriends and her family. We can discover her thoughts in her diary too! The topic of 'love' is richly written and illustrated at the story, like a new love interest, self love, jeaolusy, parents-strict love. and many more!
Personally, I thought Forever is full of emotions, because each love story is described as bittersweet one. Definition of love was not like what Viola (and maybe readers too) thought before. And at the end, I glad Viola finally find answer about What "love is forever" is.
#Forever #NetGalley
I’m not sure I can fully express how much I loved this graphic novel. We follow Viola and her family on a month-long vacation to the seaside of southern Italy, where Viola meets her old friends, makes new ones, and meets a cute local boy. Viola is an extremely angsty and relatable teenager learning all about love (the good, the bad and the ugly) with some wonderful body- and sex- positive messages. I’d recommend this to anyone for a fun and heart-warming read, and I especially think this could be a great introduction to many of these ideas for teenagers.
Thanks to NetGalley and Europe Comics for providing this ARC in exchange for an honest review
it was such a sweet, heartbreaking, at times cute summer read. i can't believe it ended the way it ended tho, it fucking broke me man 😭
the characters were so vivid, although i did find myself wanting to know more about Viola's friends, i think i didn't get enough, but anyway, the artwork so beautiful aswell!
if u have a chance at getting this novel, make sure u do, it's freaking amazing! brilliant to read in summer time either 💜
This comic was so wonderful that I read it in one sitting.
I love watching the characters' growth, accepting themselves and learning that to receive love, you first need to love yourself.
This Comic touched on what teenagers often struggle with - love. What is love? How do you know if you are in love? And the answer is - you don't until it's there, in front of you. At these points in a teenagers life, love can lead to cruelty, obsession and this comic showed that not everything you read in magazines or online is true, and I loved that the most.
This story was beautiful, and the illustrations were perfect - I will definitely recommend this to others!
Demasiado realista. Demasiado duro. Demasiado doloroso como para ser "solo un cómic".
Este cómic no nos narra una historia de amor de verano más, sino una historia que sin lugar a dudas durará más que un verano. El romance que se desarrolla pareciera que no será la gran cosa pero luego, al complementarlo con el contexto y los personajes, todo parece encajar a la perfección y conforma un cómic maravilloso. Este cómic me ha dejado un sabor agridulce y un dolor en el pecho, una decepción en cuanto a mis esperanzas de que el amor fuera para siempre, que los protagonistas estuvieran juntos siempre... Pero como dice al final del libro, quizás lo que "el amor para siempre" quiere decir es que la marca que te deja en ti es para siempre.
¡Muy recomendado!
Perfectly reasonable Italian evocation of teenaged holiday romances. Our heroine, with her flat chest and her penchant for making a diary like Wimpy Kid's but with A-levels, is intent on hooking up with the guy from school she has hots on, when a few of her friends and their families all descend on the same southern beachside resort complex. Only, their apartment isn't free so they get stuck away from town, and with that her resentment of her mother, her lot and so on only escalates. She can still have time with her friends, needy, judgemental, not her type or whatever they may actually be – but will she be of a mind to generate a true, natural friendship with someone when the chance arises?
All told it's a more than decent portrayal of a young woman finding herself, despite her tempers, despite boys, and despite everything else in her way. It's given depth and further emotions when she befriends two elderly lesbians the camp seems to have sided against, and while it doesn't exactly let rip and allow for providing something new, it doesn't fully stick to the usual path. Finally, the soundtrack (Blur, Ace of Base, Fool's Gold etc) either dates the story terribly and for no real good purpose, or suggests this is based on personal memories. You decide. I decided that this had a warmth I wanted, and for everything it had about it that was too obvious, it was well worth my time.
"Maybe this is what 'love is forever' means: it's not timeless, but it leaves a mark so deep that it accompanies us all our life."
Viola is 15 and on holiday with her family. She convinced them to spend the summer in the south of Italy, close to the sea, where all her friends and her current crush are. This summer will be special for Viola: not only she will experience her first love, but she will also meet two incredible women that will leave a mark on her life and on her way of seeing the world. At the end of the summer, Viola won't be the same...
What a nice story! Forever is a sweet graphic novel that tells us the story of a teenager from her point of view. I felt close to Viola, I see a lot of myself in her at that age: a bit shy but curious, wanting to be free but at the same time afraid to disappoint her parents, interested in knowing more about the world. Thanks to her curiosity and naivety, we get to see her learning about different topics: her first love (and what is love really?), the weight of society that imposes a certain behavior or look to teenagers, different forms of violence against girls/women perpetrated by boys/men, homosexuality.
All these topics are very important, especially for Viola's growth, however I do wish that Lili and Paula were more present in the story: not only their relationship is the best representation of love here, but Viola learns so much from them about the world and herself too. Their support and help during the summer is essential for our protagonist and, even if for a short time, they do become like parents for her.
The artwork of this graphic novel is very well done and totally accurate: if you check out this book you'll see exactly how Italy looks like, with its bars next to the beach, buildings where they're not supposed to be, songs and parties by the bonfire... The story takes place (I believe) in the 90's so you'll also see the classic Italian telephone booth and the little game kids used to do with the coke can. What a blast from the past!
A very sweet and interesting story, recommended especially to young readers!
4 stars.
* I'd like to thank Assia Petricelli and Sergio Riccardi, Europe Comics and NetGalley for providing this ARC in exchange for my honest review.
*Disclaimer: I received this book for free from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
This is a beautiful graphic novel which explores different types of love, romantic, platonic and familial.
I was impressed by how much depth the author managed to get into the characters with so few words on a page and the illustrations were perfect. Each of the characters were distinct and there were side-plots that didn’t detract from the protagonist’s journey.
Overall, this was a near perfect graphic novel. There were a few storylines that I would have loved to see expanded slightly but on the whole, I thoroughly enjoyed this and will definitely be recommending it.
4 out of 5 stars!
This graphic novel follows a girl named Viola who is vacationing with her family over the summer. She navigates new friendships, long term friendships, crushes, and romance.
This book was originally written in Italian, and I sometimes felt like the writing was a bit stilted but I think that may be because of the translation, so it didn't bother me too much. I had some mixed feelings about the art, but I think that is more about my particular taste when it comes to art in graphic novels, and it didn't detract from the content of the book. However, I did have a bit of confusion in a couple places because of the similar character design between Viola and one of her friends, especially in shots where I only saw part of one of their heads/faces -it was a little difficult to tell who was who.
I like several of the themes of the graphic novel, especially the focus on body image, but I felt that for such a short graphic novel is may have tried to focus on too many things. I didn't feel like all of the themes/issues touched on in the book got all of the development and discussion that they needed, and I would've liked this to be a bit longer. Some things got wrapped up very quickly at the end,. I also felt like there were several slightly offensive things that different characters said that the text was not condoning, but that didn't get explicitly addressed and I would have liked to see all of that examined in text,
I was also a bit confused about what the age of the protagonist of the graphic novel was, and I went in thinking she was about 16-17 and was shocked at the explicit art of the main character because of what I thought her age was. She may be more like 18-19 but this was never really made clear, and I still feel a little weird about how much of her body was shown in the graphic novel. This is categorized under Adult in NetGalley, but based on the description I assumed the main character was younger, The age rating on the publisher's website says 15+, which is a little confusing to me because of the artwork.
Forever follows a teenage experience on a family vacation as the protagonist navigates relationships.
I found this a really heartbreaking and beautiful story, and it felt like a strong examination of figuring out what love means.
Thank you to the publisher and to NetGalley for this ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Oh, this was sad and heartwarming at the same time. I loved it so much. And it reminded me of being a teenager, in a way. First love, being misunderstood, thinking that you know everything.
I can't say that I had the same experience with my parents, though, but it reminded me of younger age all the same.
And I just loved the art. There was something peaceful in it and in the colors. I wish this was longer, I really enjoyed it.