Book Review: Friends 2 Lovers
by Jonathan Anthony Burkett
Publication Date: Dec 17, 2009
List Price: $19.99
Format: Paperback, 396 pages
Classification: Fiction
ISBN13: 9781436394055
Imprint: Xlibris
Publisher: Author Solutions
Parent Company: Najafi Companies
Book Reviewed by Emanuel Carpenter
Who doesn’t remember their first love? And what about the girl next door? Or how about the boy you cared for in school only to end up in the friend zone? In Jonathan Anthony Burkett’s new novel, he attempts to capture that feeling young people get when the bonds of friendship mature into something stronger.
"Friends 2 Lovers" is the story of high school best friends Claude and Kelly
that spans over a two and a half year timeframe. Though they have been best
friends for many years, everyone from their friends, family, and the
protagonists themselves know that they are destined to be together. After
all, the best romantic relationships start off as friendships anyway, right?
Even Kelly’s mother loves Claude like a son. However, it’s the actions that
transpire with Claude’s family that could threaten this relationship and
even his life.
Claude’s dad Charles has a past that catches up to him at the very worst
time for Claude, when his future looks the brightest. That past results in
an all-out brawl involving Claude, Charles, Claude’s brother Troy (a 20-year
old high school senior), and a father and son pair of thugs named Stanley
and Robert. When the unthinkable happens, Claude must muster up the strength
to either pick up the pieces and move on, or simply just end it all himself.
His solution may surprise you.
Give newcomer author Jonathan Anthony Burkett credit for penning a novel
meant for a younger generation and the realities of the world many of them
deal with today, such as school violence, friends in love, suicide, and
tumultuous family relationships. The author was on the right track with the
idea of a story of a patriarch whose past not only catches up with him but
affects the lives of those who love him most. Plus the idea of young people
who want to be together for the sake of love and not just pleasure is
refreshing in this day and age. Perhaps he will find his audience in diehard
romance readers, those who enjoy books with somewhat of a Christian theme,
and those who can appreciate the PG nature of the language.
Still, there are far too many issues with the book to call it a must read.
This includes a predictable ending (the title pretty much sums it up), lazy
narration that tells readers what happens instead of showing them, and
awkward dialogue, including proper-speaking thugs ("They wanted payback
badly, Dad. I guess the kind of payback that they thought would be the best
was to get me while I was by myself, Dad…"). And this character is supposed
to be hard? Not only that, but many of the characters are underdeveloped and
are rarely described physically. And the plot, which gets off to a fairly
decent start, meanders into Nytol territory.
The final result is a finished product that reads more like a workable early
draft instead of something readers should plop down their hard-earned money
to buy. But just because one person doesn’t love it, doesn’t mean another
won’t at least like it.
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