Member Reviews

As soon as I read the plot summary for TLBOE, I knew I had to get an ARC. Thanks to Penguin Random House and NetGalley, I did, and I'm happy to report that I was not disappointed.
Though it occurs during apocalyptic times, it juxtaposes tenderness by the main character finding love. It's realistic-semi-borne of circumstance but with a real-world level of attraction and skepticism. Even in the brief amount of time spent getting to know Liz and Maeve, I was rooting for them.
There's so much more to the story than romance, TLBOE hits a sweet spot during a climate-induced possible end-of-the-world scenario. Not much of the novel is spent on how food and shelter are acquired, but rather when friends and community ties start disintegrating. Or remain intact.
The focus is on relationships, past and present.
There's also some action, some bad guys, humor, and a touch of mystery. I enjoyed it very much. Then I found out that the author is a junior in college and my mind was blown. What a talent! I look forward to a long, successful career for Lily Braun-Arnold.
#NetGalley

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Once I started this book, I found it really difficult to put down. Liz reminded me of one of my friends, and that made her character really endearing to me. The ideas here felt very grounded in reality, and played to that very well. Fans of apocalyptic tales will definitely enjoy this one!

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I loved the contept of this book, it sounded very interesting, and let me tell u, it really was! Soo interesting, I really enjoyed it and I really liked the main character.

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This book was an incredible story of two teenage girls fighting for what they love. In a post apocalyptic book, it was nice to see the girls fighting for what they love in their small corner of the world.

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I think the concept of this book ended up being better than the execution, at least to me. The idea of a dystopian/post-apocalyptic world centered around a bookstore acting as a lending library/waystation/post office for the survivors is so cool. Especially since the main character collects the stories of the people she meets--what they were doing before the Storm hit, what they miss most, how they're coping now. There are excerpts of these stories after every few chapters or so, which added a nice touch to the story. Unfortunately, that's about all I liked from this one.

The 1st-person POV was not my favorite and the writing style itself felt very repetitive--lots of the same sentence structure being used back-to-back on the same page; would've been okay if it was just used occasionally for emphasis, but it was used far too often so it ended up diminishing the impact. The romance itself felt underdeveloped as well. The only thing tying the two characters together was circumstance; other than that, there didn't really feel like anything connecting them. I think this would've been fine if that was the point of the romance, but it wasn't.

I really wish that the bookstore had had more of a focus than it seemed to--particularly in the flashbacks that occur almost every other chapter. While I appreciate that the flashbacks were utilized as a tool to both set-up the main character's back story and the lead-up to the Storm, I wish they had focused less on her family drama and more on how the bookstore ended up being such a critical facet of her life, enough that she'd risk keeping it safe during an apocalypse. It just felt under-utilized given the importance it later plays in the story.

While there were some decent horror elements throughout (particularly in later chapters), I feel like overall this just didn't end up working for me.

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very fun/interesting thriller about these mysterious "storms" of acid rain or somesuch stuff. it was a bit too cozy to really pull it off, though, and a bit too thrillery to pull off cozy. 3.5 stars. tysm for the arc.

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Liz Flannery didn't expect to be the only person with shelter until someone tries to break in. Liz befriends Maeve to keep from being lonely. Maeve suggests repairs to be made and a supply run for water and food. Trouble happens along the way but is it trouble for Liz or Maeve? What about the next Storm? Find out in The Last Bookstore on Earth.


I would like to thank Delacorte Press for this ARC via Netgalley.

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Well, I had pretty high hopes for this book, but sadly it just didn't hit for me. There was a solid entry to the story with the setting and plot, and the idea of living in a bookstore post-devastating weather event was, to say the least, interesting. I just couldn't get down with the action, or lack thereof, and just when I thought things were going to get going it slowed down and was like moving molasses, slow and steady, but never getting anywhere. I will say that this book has a significant audience. I can see many kids loving the hell out of this thing, I just think I was not the intended audience. No harm, no foul.

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The Last Bookstore on Earth By Lily Braun-Arnold

This was not an easy book, a bit grim, but it might well be a valuable one, especially if it inspires work to save the environment. I had to step back and fortify myself with a laugh-out-loud book before continuing to read, much as I read NIGHT in segments between uplifting stories in Jonesborough.
I loved Liz, serious, helpful, sharing books and recording people’s stories, and her friend Maeve, who says of those stories, “If you think it matters, it matters. It matters to the people who have given you their stories and . . . to all the people who will read them in the future.”
To be remembered matters, to help life continue matters, being kind matters — this book matters.

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So So good. I'm always searching for nooks that capture the same elements of sci-fi/post-apocalyptic novels that I love and am slowly finding them. The Last Bookstore on Earth won't be for everyone because its execution is on the slower side. Rather than an epic tale of violence at every turn, there's a bitterness to the characters for still living while everyone around them saw the world for what it is now. Each character's choices aren't wrong or right, but rather their own to make as they thought it was the correct one at the time. Despite the world ending, we have to eventually live in a new normal, and not be bogged now with the what-ifs. The privilege of Liz getting to live while her entire family died is a strange feeling for her, which makes her internal arc so harrowing.

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Thank you NetGalley for the eARC of The Last Bookstore on Earth. I was intrigued by the premise of this book..acid rain dystopian? Sure! Sign me up! Overall it was a quick read and held my attention throughout. The flashbacks helped exp[ain the trauma our protagonist dealt with, otherwise it would not have made sense as to why she chose to stay. I would have liked some more explanation on the acid rain, but, in general, it wasn't necessary to enjoy the book.
I think YA readers who enjoy a good dystopian will be entertained, and who doesn't want to hang out in a bookstore after the apocalypse?

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I loved the premise of the book, a young lady, operating the last Book Store on Earth. I loved when people would come and trade food for a book. I also really enjoyed that she was a post office or a bulletin board of sorts for people passing through.

I felt that it was a bit too contrived. The people in the woods coming to steal a generator. What are they going to do with it? Two people of the group in the woods actually know Liz, yet they are coming to take the generator and kill her? It didn't make sense.

The writing was great, I loved the momentum of the book, it was pretty fast paced. I even liked Maeve, I felt that there was so much history that was left out of that character.

I wanted more details, about the first rain/storm. I wanted to know how the acid rain could dissolve humans but now wood or steel.

I hope that there is a second book to flesh out some of the questions that I have.

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This was a really good story in a post-apocalyptic world that I thought had been done to death. I was pleasantly surprised by how fresh and new this story was. I absolutely adored Liz and Maeve, they made the whole thing. They were written so well and I could see them starring in a great movie series. Amazing work, I really enjoyed it!

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You'd think with all that's going on in the world that reading about a post-apocalyptic bookstore would be low on my list of things to do, and yet I found myself voraciously tearing through "The Last Bookstore on Earth", eager to see what might happen to Liz as she struggled to keep going after losing everyone she loved and everything she knew. Braun-Arnold's take on what happens in the wake of an apocalyptic climate disaster was intriguing, especially with the novel set only a year after the events that led to society's fall.

Add to that an interesting dynamic with the characters and a spot of romance, and you've got yourself a good dystopian read to keep you company while you're inside avoiding the climate disasters occurring in real life. I'd be very interested in reading more by this author, and I look forward to reading more of Braun-Arnold's books in the future.

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I’m not normally a fan of dystopian books but I rather enjoyed this one. I think it is going to be an excellent addition to my library. I thought it took a while for the main character to disclose how her family members died. But it made sense once it happened.

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It was a fluke that Liz survived the big storm that rained acid on the world. It was a tragic error that her family did not. Once the storm passed, Liz couldn't bear to stay at home, so she returned to her workplace: a bookstore in suburban New Jersey. She moves into the apartment over the store (I was kind of hoping she'd settle into the Dystopian-Romance section, but no). A year later, she survives by eating a lot of ramen noodles, trading with the few other survivors as she can, and providing a sort of community center where people can leave messages for their missing.

Then two things happen: a girl, Maeve, tries to break into the shop one night, and Liz hears that another storm is coming. It's sad human nature that she wants to bury her head in the sand about the approaching danger, but it's cheering human nature that she and Maeve form a tentative alliance that morphs into a Sapphic love story. External conflicts—Maeve has made some enemies, including Liz's former crush/workmate — drive the action, while internal conflicts, like Liz's anxiety and near-agorophobia drive the relationship.

Braun-Arnold has given us a lesbian-positive story that is NOT set in a brutal post-Apocalyptic world. The people outside of the bookstore have not descended into rape and cannibalism, for which I was grateful. Instead, the characters all have issues they need to work through, even while the horrifying threat of another acid rain storm (just plausible to give the reader pause) counts down their time to figure it all out.

Thanks to Delacorte Press and NetGalley for the eARC in exchange for my unfettered opinion.

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DNF at 30%.

Thanks to Netgalley and Delacorte Press for the eARC but unfortunately this one was not for me.

My issues are a few… first, this book was pretty boring for a weather-related dystopian. This girl just hung out at a bookstore for almost an entire year? No issues?? Compare this to Life As We Knew It and it pales in comparison. Also I really hate how we get almost no actual details about the world itself / the acid rain and the other weather related events that were happening for MONTHS before the acid rain. Like…… I wanted more? I saw other reviews complaining about the same thing. I needed more info.

And the MC… I just didn’t like her at all. She was DUMB. How do you just put your hand in a generator? And it gets almost completed mauled but ehh she’s fine bc they cauterized it….. okay. 🤨

My final thought is: when is this even set? Like the year? If it’s 2025, it makes no sense. Why? Because we have references to things from 2008-2012: Breaking Dawn, Pirates of the Caribbean, High School Musical… The earliest is 2014 with The 100. And I’m soooo confused. Because a teen in 2025 would NEVER automatically think of Elizabeth Swann when they heard the name Liz. I haven’t thought about those movies since movie 4 tanked and I LIVED that generation okay. 😐 Also please do not enter a High School Musical reference when it makes no sense. “I should have pumped my fist into the air like a character from HsM” - what??? Ummmmm no.

So all in all, this one definitely was not for me.

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It kinda gave a play on the Walking Dead and The Last of Us just minus the monsters. The bad guys here were humans and Mother Nature. Very easy read and a slight queer relationship going but nothing too heavy on feelings just because it was a dystopian thing going on and no one else was around to process the feelings they were feeling.
The main character changed for the better and I loved that for her as well as the other main character. They both needed each other after the time that had during life when everything went down.

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This book had my interest from the first page. It's a different take on a dystopian book with a character who has managed to create a new life in a bookstore she never leaves. I liked how the storyline evolved with each new character and learning the stories behind some of them. I would recommend this to anyone who likes a good dystopian story.

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An un-put-downable book, I never wanted to stop and then couldn't wait to pick it up again. Liz is living alone in a bookstore living a lonely life. But she does have contact - people come by, and she acts like a type of post office - people leave things for her to pass along to others. She manages and does ok. One day Maeve comes in and she stays to help Liz fix the bookstore. Another storm is coming, and it brings acid rain which not only kills people, but destroys buildings and causes chaos. Things are ok until Maeve runs into the group she used to live with and now they want the bookstore. Maeve wants to leave, but Liz refuses to go. I never quite understood why Liz couldn't leave. I get that she had a connection with the store and the town, but the bookstore was basically falling apart. Wasn't there another house or building she could move into? That part didn't make a lot of sense to me, but I went with it. A story about perserverence, finding love, adapting, and surviving. Thanks to netgalley for the ARC.

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