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The Chapel Wars

de Lindsey Leavitt

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715362,233 (3.53)4
Juvenile Fiction. Juvenile Literature. Humor (Fiction.) HTML:

Sixteen-year-old Holly wants to remember her Grandpa forever, but she'd rather forget what he left her in his will: his wedding chapel on the Las Vegas strip. Whatever happened to gold watches, savings bonds, or some normal inheritance? And then there's Grandpa's letter. Not only is Holly running the business with her recently divorced parents, but she needs to make some serious money??fast. Grandpa also insists Holly reach out to Dax, the grandson of her family's mortal enemy and owner of the cheesy chapel next door. No matter how cute Dax is, Holly needs to stay focused: on her group of guy friends, her disjointed family, work, school and... Dax. No wait, not Dax.

Holly's chapel represents everything she's ever loved in her past. Dax might be everything she could ever love in the future. But as for right now, there's a wedding chapel to save.… (mais)

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Exibindo 5 de 5
To come. But it could have been so much more.

This was just an okay book for me. It’s a romance with a Romeo and Juliet theme, which is even acknowledged by the characters, Dax and Holly. If Ms. Leavitt had really run with that, I feel like this could have been so much more. There are a lot of characters, most of whom are given just a bit of page time. Some of them could have been cut to allow for more character development. Older sister Lenore, is just there to show how dysfunctional the family is, and to provide a car ride; she could have been sacrificed to give more info about Camille, the girlfriend of Sam, Holly’s best friend. Holly has three other guy friends, Mike, Grant, and Porter., who are kind of interchangeable. I wanted more info on Victor, the competition, and James, Holly’s younger brother. Perhaps I am being too picky, but I wanted this to be one of the ones that would fall into the better than it looks category. ( )
  readingbeader | Oct 29, 2020 |
Oh, wow. THIS is what I love to read in YA contemporary. I adored this book. I read it while on a trip and stayed up way later than I should've just so I could finish it in one setting. It was so cute and had unique qualities in it that just made me love it to pieces. I really, really loved it! ( )
  spellbindingstories | May 24, 2018 |
For more reviews, gifs, Cover Snark and more, visit A Reader of Fictions.

Dahlia Adler, Recing ball and author extraordinaire (Behind the Scenes/Last Will and Testament/Under the Lights), wins again. She told me over and over to read The Chapel Wars. I wasn’t sure, not having heard all that much buzz about Leavitt’s books. The time came, though, when I had to read this book, mostly because I checked it out of the library and then proceeded to rack up $1.20 in fines (oops), so obviously I had to at least read it now that I was paying money for it. Yes, I know that I am marvelous at life. Enough about that. The short version is that The Chapel Wars turned out to be quite fantastic.

The Chapel Wars took a bit of time to grab me, I’ll admit. The voice is unique, but not in a way that jumped off the page for me. This did result in a lack of emotional connection, but, by the end, I loved this book in a very intellectual way. I can’t really explain why I wasn’t feeling all the feels; it seems as though I should have been. Part of my struggle at the start was that Holly has a few really odd descriptions, which I can’t help not sharing so here you go:

If looks were America and ugly was Los Angeles, this boy was comfortably Kentucky. West Virginia when he smiled.


Seriously? What does that even mean? Also, poor LA.

“If hate were a person, we’d be second cousins.”


I’m amused, but also a bit confused again. Holly doesn’t do this stuff often, but it really stood out to me as strange since she’s of a more mathematical mind most of the time. I did really love her thing with counting and her mathematical predictions of marriages’ success.

The Chapel Wars takes place in Las Vegas, but in a way that was totally new to me. The book is both very Vegas-focused and not at all like I expected something set in Vegas to be. I’ve never been and don’t have much interest in going, since the casinos and shit I’ve seen in the movies don’t really interest me. In this case, though, Vegas is Holly’s hometown. For her, it’s not casinos and “what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas.” There are some ways in which it’s very much not any other place, but it’s also a much more beautiful portrayal than I’ve ever seen. Holly’s attempts to make Dax love Vegas made me want to visit it too. Ironically, Leavitt’s fiction made a real place seem less fictional to me.

The book opens on the funeral for Holly’s beloved Grandpa Jim. When his will is read, everyone’s stunned by the revelation that he’s left the chapel to Holly to run. Even more shocking is the news that, unless she manages to drum up a whole lot more business, the chapel’s going to be closing for good. This, too, is very unique YA novel territory, but I love the way it was handled.

Holly may not have the experience of an adult, but she brings an open-mindedness to bear that none of the adults would have. I also love that The Chapel Wars delves into whether this is a good thing for Holly or not. Yes, Holly seems to be good at it, and she does love the chapel. However, that doesn’t mean that setting herself up to do nothing but this without considering other options is a good thing. It could have just been a quirky story about how she got to run a chapel, but The Chapel Wars gets into real consideration of the future. The way things resolved was also perfect: While it sucks that big business screwed them over, it’s realistic. Plus, it’s much better for Holly to have the chance to go to college and do all of that stuff, while Donna sets up a new chapel. Holly can probably take over from her later if she wants…or not.

At first, I thought Holly was going to be one of those girl-hating heroines. She’s friends with a bunch of jocks and doesn’t always have the nicest thoughts about her best friend’s girlfriend, Camille. Holly doesn’t really now how to be a girl and doesn’t feel all that comfortable around them. As the book goes on, though, Holly and Camille become good friends, and it ends up being really positive all around.

What I love super duper the most about The Chapel Wars is the ways that the romance defies traditional gender roles. It’s not just Holly and Dax either. Sam and Camille’s relationship also doesn’t subscribe. In both cases, the guy is more romantic, more focused on commitment, and more emotional. The issues that Holly has with understanding and expressing emotion are the sort of thing that I almost never see women deal with in pop culture. I love love love every bit of this.

“Look, Dax. I love that you are super in touch with your emotions and can share all these things with me. I’m serious. It’s great. But I’m not like that. I wish I was.”


While I definitely do ship Dax and Holly, they never reached that epic shipping level. I really should have been intensely into the ship, because they do exchange some most excellent banter. It’s also really nice that Dax and Holly actually get time to be a couple. The romance feels way more rooted in real life than most novel romances do. They meet, they date, they DTR, and they have to work through normal couple issues.

Friends who seek out the banterfluff, hie thee to thy local book procurement place and seek out The Chapel Wars. I don’t know why I went all Shakespearean. Bono or Elvis would have been more apt, but oh well. ( )
  A_Reader_of_Fictions | Mar 20, 2015 |
Another nice rom-com style read from the author of Going Vintage. Touching on a few deeper issues, Holly's sadness at losing her Grandpa is muted by the news that he left her the family wedding chapel, Rose of Sharon. Finances are tight, and somehow Holly must dig deep to try to save their family livelihood, with competition from other famous Vegas wedding chapels and one particularly annoying one right across the parking lot. There's a little Romeo and Juliet salute as the grandson of their rival chapel turns out to be a romantic interest for Holly. ( )
  ethel55 | Jun 14, 2014 |
Think Romeo and Juliet . . . but with Las Vegas wedding chapels. Seventeen-year-old Holly's beloved grandfather has just died, and he left her an unusual legacy: his business. Holly is now the owner of the Rose of Sharon Wedding Chapel, which is about to be crushed under a mountain of debt. To make things worse, Holly's grandfather had a long-running feud with the owner of the tacky chapel next door . . . but Holly might just have a little bit of a crush on said owner's grandson Dax. Holly doesn't have time for a secret romance -- she's too busy finding ways to raise enough money to save the chapel (and dealing with friends and schoolwork, as well). But when Dax proves to be as interested in Holly as she is in him, it proves hard to resist his considerable charms. Can Holly save the chapel and keep her relationship with Dax a secret?

This is a cute and fun YA romance. It does deal with a few deeper issues, like Holly's grief at her grandfather's death, but the overall tone is fairly light. Readers who like books by Jennifer Smith and Stephanie Perkins, or who have enjoyed other books by this author, are likely to enjoy this. ( )
  foggidawn | Apr 3, 2014 |
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Juvenile Fiction. Juvenile Literature. Humor (Fiction.) HTML:

Sixteen-year-old Holly wants to remember her Grandpa forever, but she'd rather forget what he left her in his will: his wedding chapel on the Las Vegas strip. Whatever happened to gold watches, savings bonds, or some normal inheritance? And then there's Grandpa's letter. Not only is Holly running the business with her recently divorced parents, but she needs to make some serious money??fast. Grandpa also insists Holly reach out to Dax, the grandson of her family's mortal enemy and owner of the cheesy chapel next door. No matter how cute Dax is, Holly needs to stay focused: on her group of guy friends, her disjointed family, work, school and... Dax. No wait, not Dax.

Holly's chapel represents everything she's ever loved in her past. Dax might be everything she could ever love in the future. But as for right now, there's a wedding chapel to save.

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