A review by stephxsu
Guyaholic by Carolyn Mackler

4.0

V Valentine, the insuppressible anti-hero from VEGAN VIRGIN VALENTINE, is back in a story about her own growing up and falling into love. All her life, V has flitted from one boy to the next at breakneck speed, never stopping to allow any possible emotions to cling to her. Then one fateful hockey game she crosses paths with Sam. Somehow things with him are different.

Could it be that Sam is V’s first real boyfriend? V isn’t so sure. And given her own mother’s history with numerous men, she’s pretty certain that love, the kind of emotion that causes you to remain faithful to only one person, doesn’t exist. So she constantly pushes Sam away, denying her feelings and, finally, permanently wrecking any relationship they had.

Ashamed, V decides to take a cross-country car trip by herself to visit her mother, whom she has not seen for a while now. Her adventure is nothing spectacular, but it’s the thinking that V does on the trip that causes her to realize how she’s different from her mother, and how she’s grown and is, just maybe, ready to open up to love.

While not one of my favorite books of hers, Carolyn Mackler’s novel GUYAHOLIC is nevertheless entertaining, a heartwarming overture for a girl who, despite her faults, we love. It’s impossible not to cheer for V as she survives her car trip and learns about herself in the process.