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Sunday 6 April 2014

Review: Third Degree by Julie Cross

Title: Third Degree
Third DegreeAuthor: Julie Cross
Release Date:  25th March 2014
My Rating: 3.5/5 stars

Blurb on GoodreadsI used to be “Isabel Jenkins, child prodigy.” As lame as that sounds, at least it was an identity. But now I’m not sure what I am. I just failed the most important exam of my life—the emotional readiness test required to get into a medical residency program—and it turns out my parents can’t stand each other. Now I’m trying to figure out how to pick up the pieces of my life, and that means re-enrolling as a college freshman, but this time I’m shutting the books and majoring in being eighteen.But so far, my roommate hates me and I’m not into the party scene. The only good thing about school has been getting to know my insanely hot RA. Marshall Collins makes me wonder about everything I missed while I was growing up too fast. Pretty soon we’re hanging out constantly, but for the first time, I find myself wanting more than a no-strings-attached physical relationship. And the lesson I really need is one Marsh definitely can’t teach me: love. Because I’m going to be alone forever if I don’t learn fast.


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My actual rating was 3.5 stars. This is what I think of as a rare breed of NA fiction. The story doesn't depend on steamy scenes to sell it, the story sells itself. It was far deeper and written so much better than I had expected it to be based on the (terrible) cover! I absolutely loved this contemporary for that reason; because it deals with college-aged people and the scenarios and dilemmas they face.

Being a child genius and having been treated as such ever since she was adopted at a young age, Isabel Jenkins aka Izzy has never really been 'normal' and doesn't even know what that word really means. She's been on the fast track to following in her fathers footsteps and becoming a surgeon since she was first admitted to college at just 12 years of age, and has never stopped to think what she's missing out on. That is until she is stopped dead in her tracks, and refused passage to the final steps to becoming a surgeon when she fails a psych test. According to the shrink, she needs to experience life as a normal teen to reconnect her emotions and be a better surgeon, and the best way to do this is to head back to college and see what she missed out. Here she meets Marshall Collins aka Marsh, who takes it upon himself to ease her back into society and keep her social mishaps to a minimum. But things are never as straight forward as that!

This book was actually a cute, quick, fun read and I thoroughly enjoyed it. The setting was essentially your average college setting, but the story was pretty different. I loved Izzy and her wacky sense of normal. Her high level of intelligence matched with her equally high level of social awkwardness had me smiling, smirking and even cringing on her behalf. As much as her thought process sometimes baffled me and her IQ intimidated others, she was quite relatable in her fear of being alone, her sense of being adrift and not knowing where exactly she belonged. She was easy to like and her development throughout the novel was clear and well done.

Marsh was so super cute! He's one of the sweetest fictional guys, and so far from the standard badboy, tatted up tough guy found in most NA novels. I absolutely adored his devotion to his family, his loyalty to his friends and his selflessness towards just about everybody. I loved how he took Izzy under his wing and made it his job to help her and understand her, and how he learnt to trust her as she learnt to trust him. Together they made it a gorgeous tale of love, belonging and learning to trust. Cross's writing is engaging and entertaining. I really liked the pace set in the book and the way in which all the dilemmas were resolved/saw through. It felt real, and yet happy. As much as these two main characters were well developed and easy to become fond of, I just wish we had seen a little more of the background characters such as Jesse and 'Shirtless Carson'. 

All in all, this book is a great addition to the NA genre and is a super cute, well written contemporary with a substantial plot that was engaging, entertaining and adorable. I definitely recommend it to all you contemporary/NA lovers!


*This book was kindly offered to me in exchange for an honest review*

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