Emmett is popular -- a fact that he attributes immodestly to how nice he is. He's always thinking of other people's needs. He's even taken it upon himself to help all of his friends find partners and he's overjoyed with planning ways in which his single friends can find each other.
He has no interest in finding a guy for himself. He doesn't mind hooking up for sex, but getting into a committed relationship will inevitably lead to heartache and Emmett has no intention of getting hurt! The human brain doesn't physically stop growing until you're twenty-five and so that's the earliest he'll be ready to find his life partner.
It's all very neat, but Emmett's perfect world is starting to come apart. A string of matchmaking failures make Emmett question his skills. And when he hurts some of his friends in the process, he doubts whether he is really as nice as he likes to to think he is. But most grievous of all is the nagging doubt in his mind that maybe (just maybe) he would like to have a romance of his own.
I'm not sure that we need yet another adaptation of Jane Austen's Emma for the YA market (even if this version is the most flaming gay boy version to date), but my primary complaint is that I found it hard to really engage with the story. Perhaps, because the characters really didn't seem like high schoolers, but rather more like college students. You don't really get the feeling that Emmett and his friends live at home with their parents. Their lives seem to mostly center around parties and flirting. That's very Jane Austen, but it's not very American high school. There's a fair amount of emortional drama, but not really any emotional depth and the result is more satire than romance.
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