#rebecca serle
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
aseaofquotes · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media
Rebecca Serle, In Five Years
2K notes · View notes
melodysbookhaven · 1 year ago
Text
“One of life’s most important challenges is determining what to hold on to and what to let go of. Do not be fooled into believing that you do not know which is which. Follow the feeling, follow it all the way home.”
Rebecca Serle, One Italian Summer
150 notes · View notes
shaps · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
"You mistake love. You think it has to have a future in order to matter, but it doesn't It's the only thing that does not need to become at all It matters only insofar as it exists. Here. Now. Love doesn't require a future."
Rebecca Serle | In Five Years
98 notes · View notes
psychopat-ka · 7 months ago
Text
"Na świecie istnieją miliony rzeczy mogących nas unicestwić; w ułamku sekundy wymazać życie, które z takim wysiłkiem staramy się podtrzymywać. Wszystko kręci się wokół tego, by nie umrzeć. Jemy, śpimy, oglądamy się w prawo i lewo, zanim przejdziemy przez ulicę. Każdy drobiazg ma nas uchronić przed czymś, co i tak nas dopadnie. Jeśli się nad tym zastanowić, to bez sensu. Największy dowcip świata. Całe nasze życie jest zorganizowane wokół tego, żeby przedwcześnie nie odejść z tego świata, a jednocześnie doskonale wiemy, że to jedyna rzecz, której nie unikniemy."
~Rebecca Serle
9 notes · View notes
edwardslovelyelizabeth · 6 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Expiration Dates by Rebecca Serle
"Wasn’t the hardest part of heartbreak the unpredictability? How you could feel the most connected to a person in one moment - like being in a teardrop together, the world a watercolor outside - and like strangers in the next?”
8 notes · View notes
a-skirmish-of-wit-and-lit · 3 months ago
Text
Book Review: Expiration Dates by Rebecca Serle
Tumblr media
Soft and soul-wrenching, Expiration Dates takes a magical realism look at love and relationships. It places a premium on the concept of fate vs. free will, of learning to live with impending uncertainty, and of deciding to invest your whole heart regardless of time constraints.
Ever since she was a little girl, Daphne Bell has received notes from the universe that stated the name of the next man she would date as well as how long the relationship would last. Whether it was days, months, or on a couple occasions, years, the notes were always accurate. So she grew to follow them to the letter even when her feelings protested, yearning for the day when she'd receive one without an end date, but secretly believing it'd never happen. However, all that changes after she receives a card with one name and nothing else: Jake.
Could this mean he is her soulmate? Is that why there was only a name and no expiration date? Or have these notes over the years been acting more as self-fulfilling prophecy because Daphne's been too afraid to face, let alone share, a devastating secret about herself?
Told with warmth and resonant emotion, this book asks readers to imagine how one might approach love differently if one knew precisely how long it would last. The author does a good job of illustrating the struggle that exists between wanting to be as present as possible in a relationship while also fearing/dreading the loss of someone whether it's imminent or not. Daphne is a character who toils intensely over life decisions, especially when it comes to love, so it is both affecting and satisfying for readers to be a part of her journey of self-discovery. Jake and Hugo are both great counterparts, too. They each bring out different sides of her, challenge her in diametric ways.
All around, this was poignant read with a unique concept and unexpected twists. Thank you to NetGalley and Atria Books for the ARC in exchange for my review!
3.5/5 stars
**Follow me on Goodreads
3 notes · View notes
opulentquotes · 4 months ago
Text
I have been asked if I needed help so many times that I have been allowed to forget the question, the significance of it. I see, now, the way the love in my life has woven into a tapestry that I've been blessed enough to get to ignore.
In Five Years by Rebecca Serle
5 notes · View notes
nonod28 · 6 months ago
Text
You mistake love. You think it has to have a future in order to matter, but it doesn't. It's the only thing that does not need to become at all. It matters only insofar as it exists. Here. Now. Love doesn't require a future.
Rebcca Serle, In Five Years
3 notes · View notes
dance-in-my-storm · 7 months ago
Text
“Wasn’t the hardest part of heartbreak the unpredictability? How you could feel the most connected to a person in one moment - like being in a teardrop together, the world a watercolor outside - and like strangers in the next?”
-Rebecca Serle, Expiration Dates
3 notes · View notes
mercerislandbooks · 8 months ago
Text
Book Notes: Expiration Dates
Tumblr media
Sometimes you pick up a book on a whim and feel, almost against your will, pulled into the plot. Unable to extricate yourself because each chapter expertly leads you into the next until you’re in so deep you have to find out what happens. Such was my experience with Rebecca Serle’s forthcoming book, Expiration Dates.
Daphne Bell’s romantic relationships have all been bound by one thing: a piece of paper that appears before or in the initial moments of meeting a man telling her how long they’ll be together. So far, the papers have never been wrong. And then one day, on her way out to the door to a blind date set up by a friend, Daphne gets a paper with no expiration date. Just the name of the man she’s going to meet — Jake. Suddenly Daphne has all the time in the world to explore a relationship with Jake, and all the confidence of believing she’s guaranteed a lifetime with this person. But as things move along with Jake, Daphne wonders how much knowing you're meant to be with someone impacts truly wanting to be with them.
Rebecca Serle does an excellent job with the slow reveal, and she uses first person, which isn’t something I encounter too often in adult fiction. To begin with I experienced Daphne as a person with abundant self-confidence yet detached and without much personal passion. But the further I got into the book and the more Daphne revealed about herself, I began to appreciate how her life had shaped her. I kept turning down pages for lines I loved for their authenticity, until, by the end, it was all just so real and vulnerable I could have turned down every page. Expiration Dates is not a conventional romance by any means, but the pleasure of it comes from both the intricacy of the construction (which would lend itself to rereading) and the deceptively straightforward prose. This would be the perfect book to buddy read with a friend because there’s so much to discuss.
Expiration Dates comes out March 19th, so put in your preorder now and have a great book to look forward to!
— Lori
3 notes · View notes
princessofbookaholics · 7 months ago
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
currently reading and loving 📃
4 notes · View notes
melodysbookhaven · 1 year ago
Text
“There is more to life than just continuing to do what we know. What got you here won’t get you there.”
Rebecca Serle, One Italian Summer
90 notes · View notes
paigeypaige19 · 2 years ago
Quote
You mistake love. You think it has to have a future in order to matter, but it doesn’t. It’s the only thing that does not need to become at all. It matters only insofar as it exists. Here. Now. Love doesn’t require a future.
In Five Years, Rebecca Serle
12 notes · View notes
a-n-n-am-a-r-i-a · 11 months ago
Text
“"I'm not sure I'm capable of it," I tell her. "Not the kind you mean." "But you are,” she says. “I wish you knew that. I wish you understood that you could have love beyond your wildest dreams. Stuff movies are made of. You’re meant for that, too.” “I don’t think I am.” “You are. You know how I know?” I shake my head. “Because that’s the way you love me.”
Rebecca Serle, In Five Years p. 205
2 notes · View notes
lavenderhayes · 1 year ago
Text
"'Look at all the colors,' she said. 'It's like the sky is on fire. Burning up the whole day. Nature has so much power if we just pay attention." - Rebecca Serle, One Italian Summer
3 notes · View notes
nat-reviews-books · 1 year ago
Text
Tumblr media
One Italian Summer by Rebecca Serle
This book was ok. It wasn't my favorite but I didn't hate it. The mother-daughter relationship throughout the book was very weird, and I'm not a fan of media where a partner cheats and hides it, but the book was great in the traveling portions. As a person who loves traveling and loves food, the descriptions of food and the joy of seeing and doing new things really spoke to me. This had some stuff I really liked and some that I really didn't.
4 notes · View notes