I’ll never forget how 'It Chooses You' ended. After all the buildup, the final scene is just this quiet, understated moment—no fireworks, no grand speeches. The protagonist sits on a park bench, watching kids play, and there’s this realization that life isn’t about big, dramatic choices, but the small, almost invisible ones we make every day. The title takes on a whole new meaning: sometimes, the things that shape us aren’t the decisions we agonize over, but the ones that feel like they’re made for us. The last page is a masterclass in subtlety, leaving you with this ache, this need to sit still and reflect. It’s the kind of ending that doesn’t just stay with you; it becomes part of how you see the world.
The ending of 'It Chooses You' hit me like a freight train, but not in the way I expected. I went in thinking it’d be some grand, dramatic climax, but instead, it’s this intimate, almost whispered conclusion. The protagonist ends up in this ordinary setting—a diner, I think—and has a conversation that feels mundane at first, but the subtext is everything. It’s about how we’re all just trying to make sense of the things that happen to us, the people who drift in and out of our lives. The title finally makes sense in those last pages: sometimes, it isn’t us doing the choosing at all.
There’s a line about 'the stories we tell ourselves to keep going,' and that stuck with me. The book doesn’t resolve neatly; it’s more like a door left slightly ajar. You’re left wondering what the protagonist will do next, but also what you’d do in their place. It’s the kind of ending that lingers, the kind you find yourself thinking about while doing the dishes or waiting for the bus. I’ve reread those last chapters a few times now, and each time, I notice something new—a detail, a turn of phrase that changes the meaning slightly. That’s what I love about this author’s work; it rewards patience.
I stumbled upon 'It Chooses You' almost by accident, tucked away in a corner of a used bookstore. The ending left me sitting there for a good half-hour, just processing. Without spoiling too much, it wraps up with this quiet, almost bittersweet moment where the protagonist finally confronts the idea of choice—not just the choices they’ve made, but the ones that seem to 'choose' them, like fate or circumstance. There’s a scene where they’re standing in the rain, and it’s like the weight of everything clicks into place. The author doesn’t tie things up with a neat bow, though. It’s messy, human, and leaves you wondering about your own 'choices.' The last line is a gut punch in the best way, one of those lines you underline and revisit when you’re feeling lost.
What I love about it is how it mirrors real life. So often, we think we’re making decisions, but looking back, it feels like something else was guiding us—whether it’s chance, subconscious desires, or something we can’t name. The book doesn’t answer that question, but it makes you sit with it. I finished it and immediately wanted to talk to someone about it, to compare interpretations. That’s the mark of a great story, isn’t it?
2026-03-29 01:47:26
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Choosing You
Jaycee Leigh
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I've crushed on Ethan McKay since the moment I laid eyes on him. After a year and a half of going to the same college, he still has no clue I exist. Aside from my best friend, I'm practically invisible since I've spent the last seven years of my life purposefully living in the shadows, just waiting for my life to begin. Not that it matters. He's got his own life to live anyway. Parties to attend. Girls to see. And a father to impress so he can regain his trust, and earn back his rightful place in the family business. So, how is it that one night, one party, changes everything for the both of us?
Step 1: Go to college. Check.
Step 2: Find a job. No luck.
Step 3: Start a family. Whoa, one thing at a time.
Alicia Chambers was stuck on Step 2. No matter how many resumes she sent out, she couldn’t find a job in her dream field: phone app development. It seemed like most successful apps were started by a single inspired person in their basement, including the most recent craze, Monster Go.
If only Alicia could find her own inspiration for an app…
Drawn into the game (research, she told herself), she meets a mysterious stranger who also plays. He’s perfect for her: rich, handsome, and nerdy. However, despite formerly being in app development himself, Jacob seems to have left it all behind.
Between romantic dates and catching monsters, Alicia finds herself growing closer to the mysterious man. But when she learns something that he deliberately kept hidden, will she flee his secretive life?
Will she let him know her own secret- that she’s carrying a little gift from all their time “playing” together?
I Choose You is a standalone romance novel. If you like new adult stories, you’ll enjoy this story of two people finding love over a phone app.
When Serena learns that the new investor at her design firm is Ethan Cole, her husband, she already knows she is about to lose.
Not because her work is weak, but because her rival Yvonne is Ethan's unforgettable first love.
For years, Serena has fought Yvonne over everything: family, status, love, and now career. But after one more public humiliation, Serena finally stops competing.
This time, she gives up Ethan and chooses herself.
When Avery moves to a new town after a family tragedy, the only person she trusts is Dante, the stepbrother who became her safe place. Their bond is built on late-night secrets and the unspoken promise that they will always choose each other.
Then Grayson Hayes, the town’s golden boy, enters her world.
What begins as a harmless dare—make Grayson fall in love and prove she can walk away—quickly becomes something real. As Avery starts to see a future beyond the life Dante built around her, the fragile balance between them begins to crack.
When the truth behind the game explodes in front of the entire school, friendships shatter, loyalties are tested, and Avery is forced to decide who she truly wants to be.
Because sometimes the hardest choice isn’t who loves you.
It’s the person you choose back.
She was sent into his house as a weapon.
He let her in knowing exactly what she was.
The curse in her blood has killed every man who ever got close, but he doesn't care. He just watches her with those calm, knowing eyes like he has already seen every move she is going to make.
She wants to destroy him.
He refuses to let her go.
And somewhere between the poison, the lies, and the dead bodies they keep stepping over, something far more dangerous than the curse starts to grow between them.
They were never supposed to survive each other.
That was always the plan.
Neither of them knew.
Shane remembers every detail of their past lives, but Adea is the key to breaking the curse that has doomed them to tragic ends. In order for the curse to be broken, Adea must choose Shane and declare her love for him.
As their fiery romance intensifies, Shane holds onto hope that Adea will choose him and break the curse. But their happiness is threatened when they are faced with the man who cursed them, and Adea must decide whether to give into her feelings for him or stay true to Shane.
Now, Shane and Adea must race against time to find a way to break the curse that has haunted them for centuries. Can Adea resist the pull of the man who cursed them and choose Shane, or will their love be doomed to end in tragedy once again?
Content Warning: Graphic sexual scenes.
*Readers of TFA, please note that Chosen Mate is an alternate storyline for The Forbidden Alpha*
Miranda July's 'It Chooses You' is this weirdly beautiful blend of documentary and fiction that feels like stumbling into someone else’s dreams. The book follows July as she interviews strangers she finds through classified ads in the LA Weekly while she’s supposedly procrastinating on writing her screenplay. The conversations are intimate, sometimes awkward, and often unexpectedly profound—like this one guy who sells his used underwear, or an elderly woman who just wants to chat about her late husband. It’s less about the plot and more about these fleeting human connections, all while July’s own creative block looms in the background.
The spoiler-ish part? The book culminates in July casting one of the interviewees, Joe, in her film 'The Future.' There’s this surreal moment where life and art collide, and you see how these random encounters shaped her work. It’s not a traditional narrative with twists, but the emotional payoff is huge—like watching someone’s loneliness dissolve into something communal. The whole thing left me thinking about how stories hide in the most mundane places, and how creativity often thrives on serendipity.
The ending of 'Chosen by the Devil' really stuck with me because it subverted so many expectations. After all the chaos and moral dilemmas, the protagonist doesn't get a clean victory or a tragic downfall—instead, they merge with the very force they'd been fighting against. The final scenes show them walking into a crimson horizon, their humanity flickering like a candle in the wind. It's ambiguous whether they're now a savior or a new kind of threat, and that duality is what makes it memorable.
What I love is how the story leaves room for interpretation. Some fans argue the merger was a necessary sacrifice to balance cosmic forces, while others see it as a corruption arc. The manga's artwork in those last chapters is haunting, especially the way shadows cling to the protagonist's smile. It's one of those endings that lingers, making you flip back to earlier chapters to spot foreshadowing you missed.