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One last stop book review
One last stop book review









Like Red, White & Royal Blue, McQuiston’s latest revels in the delightfulness of its premise. But there’s a problem-Jane’s been stuck on the subway since the 1970s. Her name is Jane and she might just be the most beautiful girl August has ever seen. Then, on her commute to class, she spots a mysterious stranger on the Q train. Her second novel, One Last Stop, arriving June 1, follows 23-year-old August, a cynical college student who arrives in New York City with a blasé attitude and low expectations. “I always felt that if the book could find its people-other depressed queer millennials-it could do well. “I wrote a book that made my brain buzz and was fun and what I want to read,” McQuiston says. It’s now being adapted into a film by Amazon Studios. Instead, word of mouth spread on social media, landing the book on the New York Times best-seller list. Her 2019 debut novel, Red, White & Royal Blue, about the relationship between the Prince of Wales and America’s first son, was an instant and unexpected success: the book found an eager audience without any of the conventional launchpads, like a celebrity book club or splashy publicity campaign. Which is what McQuiston, 30, has set out to do with her fiction. “I know that sounds very corny,” McQuiston says, gazing at the Manhattan skyline from a picnic table across the East River.īut so what if it’s corny? Corny can be nice. The author has always been drawn to romances that seem a little impossible-ones that show that the power of love can transcend anything, even time and space. Three words came to Casey McQuiston while she was taking a bath: magic subway lesbians.











One last stop book review