![]() ![]() Scott twists and turns those stereotypes, making them full, deeper characters who are anything but typical. (The other type of triangle? The girlfriend is the “good” one and the other girl is “slutty” the third type is both girls are good and have no idea the other exists because the boy is a player.) ![]() Triangles tend to have certain predictable roles. In The Unwritten Rule type of triangle, where the “cheater” is the good girl, the girlfriend is typically painted as an evil bitca. ![]() I also want something more than stereotypes. Scott gives that to me - Sarah double and triple thinks every step she takes, agonizes over what is happening, yet she cannot deny her feelings. ![]() I have never bought into the “it was an accident!” school of excuses for cheating. But when the person you love who may love you loves someone else? Such as your best friend? I want us to kiss again, I want him to kiss me, I want him.”Īh, love. In every breath I take there is the promise of his skin touching mine and I want that. The Unwritten Rule brilliantly captures all those emotions of wanting someone else, wanting a boy, wanting that boy to want you back: “”Yes,” he says, and his voice is rough, intense, and we are standing close enough to touch now but we aren’t touching, we aren’t, but I can feel how we could all around us. Let me begin with this: oh, the love, the lust, the glances, the heat. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |