Most love stories start out with love at first sight but not FanGirl and Eleanor and Park. Those books were written by Rainbow Rowell. Rainbow Rowell wrote a book called “Eleanor and Park” which is a love story with a strange start. Nebraska, February 24, 1973, was when Rainbow was born. Love and romance are what Rainbow likes to write books about, but they find love in a strange way. They don’t like each in the beginning, but at the end, they love each other. Love doesn’t always happen at first sight. Rowell’s novel's love never happens at first sight. Rowell writes with ups and downs. First, the story is going up and great things happen, next thing, something awful happens and it repeats. An example in Eleanor and Park is on page 66- 67. Eleanor gets into trouble when Park goes over to Eleanor’s house and Eleanor’s stepdad Richie gets mad at her for having a boy come over. The story went from having Park over, a high, then Richie is getting angry, a low. Then a high happens when they stumble upon a low. Rowell likes to write repetition in all her stories. …show more content…
In Eleanor and Park it starts out as Park’s perspective, then in the next chapter, the story went into Eleanor’s perspective. Rowell does that so you can notice the story in two different ways. One perspective explains what happens and what they saw and then the other person explains what happened. Then you can notice if their story is the same or different. Sometimes one perspective could move beyond just when Eleanor and Park are together like when they are at home. Most times, Eleanor gets in a predicament after and Park doesn’t know. There are some things that other books don’t have because there is a heap of details. She likes to get into a great deal of detail and distinct
Lovers True love is so rare, treasured, and ridiculed, that despite the fact that most people know that it is almost never found, they still are brave and desperate enough to try. While reading Romeo and Juliet, Eleanor commented, “It was ‘oh my God, he’s so cute’ at first sight. If Shakespeare wanted you to believe they were in love, he wouldn’t tell you in almost the very first scene that Romeo was hung up on Rosaline … It’s Shakespeare making fun of love” (44). In Omaha, Nebraska, a love story sprouts