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Vicente was never an athletic type, brilliant in his studies, or particularly lucky in matters of the heart. In his story, we follow a series of romantic failures that, with time and some distance, turned out to be less tragedies and more comedies of manners. From school to his twenties, Vicente recalls each relationship with a mix of affection, sarcasm, and a cruelly funny clarity, always with his signature: the guy who knew everything about Star Wars but almost nothing about how to handle a girl from the "high school elite."
Between passions that ended in childish jealousy and summer loves left on foreign roads, he ends up painting a hilarious and brutally honest portrait of the experience of someone who loves first with their head and only then with their heart. What Vicente really wants - a simple story of commitment, standing the test of time - seems to be the greatest challenge when, in college, everyone else seems much more interested in living fleeting romances.
This book is a kind of survival guide for those who have failed in almost all their loves but still believe, deep down, that true love may only be found after many missed connections. Love and Love is for anyone who has dated the wrong girl, said the wrong thing, made the wrong move - but still believes in the magic of the right stories.
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Vicente was never an athletic type, brilliant in his studies, or particularly lucky in matters of the heart. In his story, we follow a series of romantic failures that, with time and some distance, turned out to be less tragedies and more comedies of manners. From school to his twenties, Vicente recalls each relationship with a mix of affection, sarcasm, and a cruelly funny clarity, always with his signature: the guy who knew everything about Star Wars but almost nothing about how to handle a girl from the "high school elite."
Between passions that ended in childish jealousy and summer loves left on foreign roads, he ends up painting a hilarious and brutally honest portrait of the experience of someone who loves first with their head and only then with their heart. What Vicente really wants - a simple story of commitment, standing the test of time - seems to be the greatest challenge when, in college, everyone else seems much more interested in living fleeting romances.
This book is a kind of survival guide for those who have failed in almost all their loves but still believe, deep down, that true love may only be found after many missed connections. Love and Love is for anyone who has dated the wrong girl, said the wrong thing, made the wrong move - but still believes in the magic of the right stories.