The Last Little Blue Envelope (Little Blue Envelope, #2) by Maureen Johnson


The Last Little Blue Envelope (Little Blue Envelope, #2)
Title : The Last Little Blue Envelope (Little Blue Envelope, #2)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0061976792
ISBN-10 : 9780061976797
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 282
Publication : First published April 26, 2011
Awards : Goodreads Choice Award Young Adult Fiction (2011)

Ginny Blackstone thought that the biggest adventure of her life was behind her. She spent last summer traveling around Europe, following the tasks her aunt Peg laid out in a series of letters before she died. When someone stole Ginny's backpack—and the last little blue envelope inside—she resigned herself to never knowing how it was supposed to end.

Months later, a mysterious boy contacts Ginny from London, saying he's found her bag. Finally, Ginny can finish what she started. But instead of ending her journey, the last letter starts a new adventure—one filled with old friends, new loves, and once-in-a-lifetime experiences. Ginny finds she must hold on to her wits . . . and her heart. This time, there are no instructions.


The Last Little Blue Envelope (Little Blue Envelope, #2) Reviews


  • Sonja

    This one is somewhere between two and three stars for me, but I have to go with the lower rating because a.) I liked it less than 13 Little Blue Envelopes, and b.) the things that bothered me bothered me.

    I think with both of these books (this one and 13 Little Blue Envelopes) my main issue was that I'm not only European, I've also been to all of these places??? My criticism doesn't stem from Ginny's view of these places, because of course she was a tourist and would see them in a touristy light, but it was the things the writer used as description and facts that bothered me because a lot of them clearly stemmed from a tourist point of view and it felt like the author hadn't really engaged with the countries or bothered to get to know them on a more than superficial level, which isn't problematic for Ginny's POV, but it is problematic for the rest of the novel (she misspelled Leicester Square, for example). As someone who's very interested in culture, that just rubbed me the wrong way. There are also small things that just aren't plausible and there are examples for that in both books. This is a small one, but it's the first example I can think of: in this book, the four of them were drinking from one bottle of champagne in Dublin and there is no champagne bottle sold anywhere in Europe that will fill four water/beer cups and leave enough in the bottle for refills. This is very nitpicky, but when small things like this pile up, it just takes me out of the story.

    On the other hand, I did find both books very engaging and finished them both a few hours after I started each one, and I really liked the idea of a girl traveling around Europe (though I have massive doubts that any parent would allow their 17-year old daughter to run around Europe by themselves with no means of being contacted, but whatever). I even mostly enjoyed (minus my criticism from above) both books even though neither of the love interests really worked for me (Keith was just an asshole throughout the second book, but even in the first book I wasn't truly invested in him; and I just couldn't get over the blackmail thing with Oliver, even though I did end up liking him for the most part towards the end) and I rarely get truly invested in YA literature without getting invested in the main couple. I did like the resolution to the second book though and also, I love Richard, give me more Richard!!! I hate that he was only a supporting character (and often a minor one at that) in both books because I really liked him and I really wanted to read about some of his and Ginny's conversations because of their unusual sort-of family relationship. I also absolutely loved Ellis and .

    So yeah, I guess in short, would have absolutely adored these books if I weren't from Europe and if the (teenage) guys in it hadn't been terrible, but I am and they were, so they were just okay and not great.

  • jv poore

    Of course Maureen Johnson would write a follow up to 13 Little Blue Envelopes because so many of her fans wrote to her asking for it.

    And it is fabulous.

  • Erin

    "I'm not a violent person," Keith said under his breath, as they climbed the steps to the second level of the bus. "But I've really been meaning to work on that."


    And here are the fruits of my labor. I have two major issues with this book, namely, the absurd retconning and the blatant character flanderization.


    First: Retcon. For those who don't waste more time than I would like to admit on TV Tropes (I'm speaking to everyone except Cecy), a retcon is RETroactive CONtinuity--the author waving their hand and saying, "Hey, remember when we said this? Yeah, well, ignore that.".


    The entire premise of the first, where we were sent places by Peg was completely disregarded, with only token mentions of the blue letter when the plot of "OMGHESINLOVEWITHSOMEONEELSEWHATDOIDOOOO" got a bit slow. We knew Peg was dying of cancer while writing these--it turns out that it made her certifiably loony, even though Richard didn't say anything about invisible dogs or cats or baby Ginnys. Her backpack that was stolen? Turns out it wasn't really 'stolen'; it was traded and someone bought it. All those feelings--which were gone into in slightly floofy detail--for Keith? Yeah, now she just whines, forgetting that she's the one who left, not him.


    Which segues nicely into my other point: character flanderization.
    When we meet Keith in the first book, he's a sweet, snarky, albeit-slightly-juvenilely-delinquent-y person who we all love. Cut to the sequel, and he's arrogant, unfeeling, jerky, and altogether unpleasent verging into cruel at times. Really? And all of this, just so that the author could pair Ginny up with the new guy we meet--there's always a new guy, as we've learned--who has the charm and personality somewhere in between a sprig of parsley and a single ice-skate (paraphrase courtesy of Dorothy Parker).


    Sorry, that doesn't fly with me. You can't completely change a character and have him half-play the FMC when dating another girl and--and--and--

    *Phew*

    Breathe, Erin, breathe.

    **The Last Little Blue Envelope, rated 13+, rated 2.4/5 stars.

  • Jake Rideout

    Fans of Maureen Johnson have expressed both delight and dismay at the prospect of a sequel to 13 Little Blue Envelopes, originally published almost five years ago. "More Ginny! More Keith! *squee*!!" say the optimists. "Maureen Johnson cannot possibly top the first book, especially since she didn't leave much in the way of loose ends," say the pessimists.

    Well, pessimists, let me put your concerns to rest. This book is as good as and better than the first one. You thought the wild careening around Europe was done? Wrong. You thought the romance was played out? Wrong again. Ginny has a new haircut, a new outfit, and 304 more pages of hilarious experiences, observations, and adventures.

    In the first book, Ginny finds herself alone in Europe with thirteen letters from her dead aunt. Each letter directs Ginny to a new location and teaches her a little bit more about Aunt Peg. But when Ginny is almost done with her journey, the last letter is stolen. Now, months later, a mysterious English boy contacts Ginny to tell her that he has found the thirteenth little blue envelope--and she has to come to London to get it.

    Maureen Johnson's genius lies in her ability to make the most mundane parts of life completely hilarious. She and John Green share the honor of being the best dialogue writers in YA fiction. This novel has the added bonus of taking place mostly in England, so there is a plethora of funny nicknames and insults.

    There's also a new character: Oliver, who is holding the last letter ransom. Tall, mysterious, and kind of dashing, he's the perfect addition to the cast of characters.

    I just finished the book today, and already I want to reread it.

    EDIT: Keith is in this book! He is as Keithy as ever. I would even venture to say that his car is a main character in this book too.

  • Susan

    Some time ago, I unashamedly fell in love with Maureen Johnson's 13 Little Blue Envelopes. I included it in an imaginary teen book club series I constructed as a library school assignment and I would still swear that it is one of the most perfect books I've come across for a teen book club. One of these days I'll have one and use it. In the meantime I'll just continue to talk her book up to everyone I know. In the first book, quiet, practical Ginny is ambushed by her inheritance from her late aunt, a madcap artist whose last wishes involve Ginny doing some world traveling, following the breadcrumbs she leaves in the form of 13 letters. An unexpected hurdle separates Ginny from the last letter, but it resurfaces in the sequel along with fresh adventure, intrigue, secrets, and romantic complications. Once again, Johnson does a fine job with balance. She delivers poignancy without sappiness, romance without cheesiness, and captures every stop on Ginny's travels vividly without you feeling like you've stumbled into a travel guide.

  • Reynje

    3.5 stars

    In my experience, it’s a rare thing that a sequel outshines its predecessor – but this was the case for The Last Little Blue Envelope, Maureen Johnson’s funny and charming follow up to
    13 Little Blue Envelopes.

    Straight up, I liked this book more than the first.

    Given the title, it’s hardly a spoiler to say that the plot revolves around that last little blue envelope entrusted to Ginny by her Aunt Peg, and the journey it causes her to embark upon. The characters, some familiar, some new, have a great dynamic and chemistry that keeps the story engaging.

    Ginny herself has more agency and is a less passive character throughout the second instalment of her story - I warmed to her much more as a protagonist. While still full of Maureen Johnson’s particular brand of sharp humour and witty insights, I found this book also more touching than the first. There are some genuinely earnest moments that balance out the slight suspension of belief you need to employ for parts of the plot.

    Also, (seriously, don’t click this unless you’re prepared to be majorly spoiled – you’ve been warned)

    Again, The Last Little Blue Envelope was an enjoyable, compulsive read that is perfect for some couch escapism, although not really the type of book to stay with me a long time, or leave a huge, heart-rending impact.

    My favourite quote: “Look how his coat snaps in the wind as he walks. Very dashing. He’s like Batman.”

    Also – overjoyed to see that Ginny has a face now. Headless covers make me nervous.

  • Melissa McShane

    Near the end of
    13 Little Blue Envelopes, Ginny's backpack, containing the last of her aunt's letters to her, is stolen before Ginny can read it. Though she manages to work out what her aunt's final message is, she still wishes she'd read the letter herself. Months later, she's contacted out of nowhere by someone who says he has her letter and wants to meet her. In England.

    This is the point where Maureen Johnson starts to prove that she is some kind of evil genius. Oliver (the letter-holder), rather than handing over Ginny's property, proceeds to blackmail her heartlessly. He's read about how much money Aunt Peg's paintings made at auction, and he wants a cut. I absolutely hated him. He's selfish, cruel, refuses to even let Ginny see the letter, and in general treats her like crap--as if he had any right to demand any of the potential money from the potential sale of the artwork Aunt Peg's last letter leads to. As if Ginny, who doesn't care about the money, wouldn't have given him just about anything out of gratitude for returning the letter.

    Hated. Him.

    But by the end of the book, after all the traveling back and forth, after Ginny's heart is broken by Keith and his new girlfriend that he couldn't be bothered to tell her about (This is not a spoiler. It's obvious that Keith started to distance himself in the first chapter.), Maureen "Evil Genius" Johnson managed to make me feel sympathy for Oliver, and then to like him, and then to like him a lot. There's a moment in the final pages of the novel that simply broke my heart at how vulnerable and not-evil he really was. That's pretty impressive.

    I like this book as a conclusion to 13 Little Blue Envelopes, or maybe an extension of it. I recommend reading the two back-to-back, if possible. Excellent duology.

  • Reut

    As you can see
    here, I did not enjoy 13 Little Blue Envelopes. I was very disappointed because I know Maureen is an awesome person. (Hello, she subbed for John Green on vlogbrothers!) I would have hoped that when Maureen decided to write a sequel, she would have looked at some critical reviews and maybe seen if what they were saying was true. (This is quite mean, but authors do this all the time.
    Just ask Lauren DeStefano.)

    BUT NO, SHE OBVIOUSLY DID NOT. BECAUSE EVERY.SINGLE.FRACKING.THING I HATED IN 13LBE IS STILL PRESENT!!!

    One of the problems I had with 13LBE is that Ginny had zero personality. I hoped that the trip to Europe would have influenced her to be a bit more... outgoing? Funny? Smart? And I thought we were getting somewhere when Gin cut off her braids. But alas, Ginny had not changed a bit, meaning all her flaws from 13LBE are still here.

    Another thing: when Oliver contacts Gin about the envelopes, she just kind of rushes off the Europe without a second thought. In 13LBE, I could overlook this, cause of benefit of the doubt and all. But really, Maureen? Taking the whole of one paragraph to explain how Gin got her parents permission to go to Europe... again??

    Now we arrive in England, and it is revealed that Ginny and Keith are "kind of something." What the hell is that supposed to mean? Obviously nothing, because Keith, wonder of wonders, has a girlfriend! And he didn't bother to tell Ginny! This is the part where I would have stormed out, never to talk to Keith the arse again. But no! Ginny just smiles and keeps on going! WTF. Ginny is still a doormat.

    Look. Oliver is not the most likeable character in the book. Yet his actions are very easy to justify. He saw an opportunity that would make him money, without harming anyone. He took it. There's nothing wrong with that.

    Yet, according to the almighty Keith, Oliver is a terrible person, and he taunts Oliver throughout the book. Examples:

    Ginny and Ellis were throwing away the trash and just stepping outside when Keith started the car, gunned the engine (as much as this was possible), then pulled out abruptly. He headed right for Oliver. Oliver looked surprised, but he didn't budge, even as the white car came toward him.

    "What's he...?" Ellis said. "Oh God."

    It looked for a moment like this battle of wills was going to accidentally--

    Accidentally?
    --end in death, but at the last second, Keith turned the wheel hard, fishtailing around, sending a wave of dirty, icy slush all over Oliver.

    Keith got out and surveyed his work with satisfaction. Oliver was trying to maintain his dignity, brushing himself off calmly. The force of the splash must have washed the Zippo out of his hands. He reached into an icy puddle and retrieved it. He flicked it a few times, but it didn't produce any flame.

    "Doesn't work?" Keith said. "Oh, that is a pity."

    Let's get this straight. Keith is being an arrogant asshole and Ginny does nothing.

    I hate Ginny. And Keith.

    And I didn't like this book.

    But I still (inexplicably) like Maureen.

  • Angel Gelique

    I was hoping that I'd enjoy this book much better than the first, but I honestly didn't. It started off interesting. Ginny receives an email from a stranger informing her that he has her backpack and the envelopes, including that last envelope that Ginny didn't get a chance to see. So it's back to Europe for Ginny to continue her quest to fulfill her deceased aunt's wishes.

    This time, we meet Oliver, who comes across as even more dislikable than Keith. And Keith! I didn't care much for him while reading book one and this time around, I had little to no respect for him at all.

    The story itself didn't really hold my attention much. There just wasn't anything thrilling about it. I admit, I did warm up to Oliver, but this story left me feeling terribly unsatisfied when there were no further developments with his character. The ending felt rushed and incomplete. Definitely disappointing, in my opinion. I wouldn't continue this series should another book surface some time in the future. I'm just not very interested in knowing what happens to Ginny and/or her "friends."

  • Sylwia

    Why I Recommend Bumping This Down On Your TBR: It has to create new conflicts from resolved matters in the first book, which means it messes with the resolutions and the aspects of the first book that we enjoyed.

  • Brianna

    This is exciting, but I'm scared. :/

    After reading:
    4.5
    Still had all the elements of the first book, but it was a little slow and incomplete at times.

  • Ashley - Book Labyrinth

    I was so ecstatic when this book appeared on Netgalley. Ever since I heard this was going to be a book, I was completely excited for it. This return to the envelopes and the journey was bittersweet, because while it was great to reconnect with Ginny, it was sad knowing the last of Aunt Peg’s letters would be uncovered, and that there wouldn’t be any more journeys after that.

    The traveling aspect of this book is incredible. One of the main reasons I loved the first ‘Envelopes’ book is because of the great journey through Europe. While the scale of the trip in this book is a bit smaller, it is in no way less engaging. I was happy to take part in more zany travel antics with Ginny and her pals, and to meet some more colourful characters. The book introduces a couple of new characters who are very important to the plot. Ellis is a bit of a spitfire, and she plays an interesting role in Keith’s life, where as Oliver is presented as the bad boy who just might have something more beneath his scheming exterior.

    I thought the overarching story between Keith, Ginny, Ellis, and Oliver was a bit predictable, but Maureen Johnson still presented it in an extremely delightful way. The zany adventure and the lovely details of this book (Harry Potter references, anyone?) make it quite irresistible. This is a great continuation of both Ginny and Aunt Peg’s story that you’ll definitely want to pick up if you enjoyed the first book. Also, I have to add that I adore Richard. Anyone else?

  • Debra

    For my written review, please check out the link below:

    Debra's Book Cafe

    Debs :-)

  • Mari

    I liked this book a lot more than Thirteen Blue Envelopes. I've read reviews saying that The Last Little Blue Envelope was less adventurous than its predecessor but I beg to disagree. Because while the first book felt like a flurry of one country after another, this one was more personal. And this time, there were no rules. I loved that this book focused on the characters' relationships while the countries they traveled to provided a backdrop that's both fitting and breathtaking at the same time. And even if the "settings" took a backseat to the story, it didn't stop me from looking places up and igniting in me a serious case of wanderlust. It's a bit depressing, really, to be my age and to not have had the chance to travel outside of Asia. Someday. But I digress.

    I thought Oliver's character was skeevy at first. And although I'm still not completely over the fact that he set out to blackmail Ginny, I understand why he thought that was his only choice. And their interactions particularly those in Dublin and back at London? One word = HOT. Keith on the other hand, was an ass. Didn't like him in the first book and on this one, I hated him even more. I liked Ellis though, and Richard too.

    An excellent read.

  • Miranda

    Disclaimer: ARC received from NetGalley.

    *THERE WILL BE SPOILERS FOR THE BOOK IN THIS REVIEW*

    Trigger Warning: There’s a surprising amount of bullying in this book by one of the main characters to another main character. It ranges from verbal to physical, including acts done with a car. I will be talking about it in my review, as well.

    When I first heard that there was going to be a sequel to Thirteen Little Blue Envelopes, I was cautiously excited and optimistic. Maureen Johnson is a favorite author of mine, and she’s rarely ever disappointed me. I was happy to read about the last blue envelope, Aunt Peg’s last letter to Ginny, and see the loose ends tied up.

    I’ll start with the good first. Johnson’s descriptions, as always, are beautifully written. She has a strong talent for getting the reader to simply imagine everything the characters are seeing, and it feels real, like you’re right there beside them. I especially loved the little touches she put into domestic settings, how it brought everything to life and made it seem like it really existed, like these were real people. Often times I would simply reread a paragraph of description just because it was so well done and I loved it so much. The pacing is also well done; there was never really a dull moment in the book, or a point where I felt, “Can we get on with this, please? It’s dragging, let’s go already!” Everything moved at a good, reasonable, realistic pace.

    It’s also much easier to believe that Ginny’s parents let her go to England in this book than it was in the first. In the first, she didn’t really know who she was staying with, or where, and it seemed a little unbelievable that her parents would let her go by herself without any means of contact. Now that she has her uncle and knows people there it was much easier to swallow.

    The other little thing I loved were Peg’s last letter to Ginny. I did actually tear up at one point, when she began describing her hallucinations, and when the letter ended. It was a good end to a long journey, for both of them.

    As much as it pains me to say it, I really did not like the character development in this book. Ginny’s was well done and believable, and I loved watching her grow, but the other main characters actually kind of irritated me. My biggest problem was Keith; when Ginny mentioned that his contact was becoming less frequent and that she was going to show up at his house without telling him, it was kind of a dead giveaway about where that particular relationship was going. Sure enough, Keith has a new girlfriend, but they never actually talk about that until later in the book. Ginny just assumes they’re together from the way they act around each other, and never actually confronts Keith about it. She keeps putting it off and putting it off until it finally blows up, and it’s just not a very satisfying ending to that relationship.

    Another problem with Keith is that he turned into a major jerk in this book. Suddenly he’s bullying Oliver, the man who has the envelopes, and he won’t let up. Granted there is a good reason for it: Oliver blackmails Ginny, which I’ll get to next, but it really went over the top. At a certain point it stopped feeling natural and felt more like Keith was being made to look bad so Oliver could look good in comparison, which made it easier to write and develop his and Ginny’s relationship. It felt like an easy way out. And Keith really went above and beyond jerkiness: At one point he covers Oliver while he’s sleeping totally in snow, and dumps some on his bag so all his clothes are wet. This is when they’re in Belgium and it’s freezing outside, so his clothes will be not only wet but cold. There are also a few times when Keith threatens Oliver with his car. It just seemed to come out of left field, and maybe that’s what Johnson intended, but it didn’t come off naturally at all.

    One aspect I did really love, though, was how well Ginny and Ellis, Keith’s girlfriend, got along. They didn’t have that many scenes together in the grand scheme of things, but not once did they fight over Keith, and not once did Ginny hate her for being together with him. In fact at one point Ginny states that she sometimes liked Ellis far more than Keith. It was very satisfying to see that sort of thing done well in YA; it’s not something you see often. Usually the other woman who’s with the main character’s love interest is written as a bitch, or a slut. I liked seeing two girls in love with the same guy who were friends, and never fought over said guy. While I wish they had a little more screen time together, I enjoyed what I got and I applaud Johnson for writing them that way.

    The last major problem I had with this book is Oliver, the guy who has the envelopes. He bought the backpack off of the people who stole it at the end of the first book and found the letters. He contacted Ginny and said he’d give them to her if she came back to London, which she did. They meet at a cafe (incidentally, right after Ginny visited Keith and found out about Ellis) and he hands over twelve envelopes. He refuses to hand over the last one, because Aunt Peg wants Ginny to put together one last painting, with pieces she did that are spread out in various places that Ginny’s visited. Once that painting is assembled, Oliver wants to sell it off and take half of the money as a finder’s fee. He never says why he wants half of the money, and threatens to leave with the envelope if Ginny doesn’t agree. He states, point blank, he’ll leave and she’ll never see the envelope again if she doesn’t agree.

    Ginny, to her credit, finds it incredibly sketchy and is appropriately freaked out. But she goes along with it, because what other choice does she have? And that is my biggest problem with Oliver. He blackmailed her into doing what he wanted, and that is not a good way to start a relationship. He later becomes the new love interest, and I had trouble accepting that because of his actions when they first meet. As I said before, it really did feel like Keith was made into a jerk just so Oliver would look better by comparison, and it didn’t really work because of the blackmailing. At no point did I want Ginny to end up with him, simply because of that raw deal he made with her. It is, of course, later revealed that he had good need for the money, but Ginny explicitly says “You could have just told me that and I would have handed it over.” Still, they kiss and may at some point in the future become a couple, and it was just very hard to be happy with that outcome. It’s always better when relationships have trust in them, and when they don’t start out with one part of the couple blackmailing the other.

    There were times when the easy way out seemed to have been taken. Keith and Ginny, in an attempt to get the last letter back, plan to have Keith steal it from Oliver at a train station before he and Ginny leave for Paris. However, they arrive at the train station and only then begin making the actual plans. Isn’t it kind of stupid to plan out that sort of thing when your target could be anywhere in the midst of hundreds of people? Sure enough, Oliver arrived earlier than them and saw them plotting and figured it out, keeping them from getting the letter. It seemed like a kind of sloppy way to keep the letter from them and make Keith and Ellis join along in the adventure.

    All in all there were extremely good parts to The Last Little Blue Envelope: I enjoyed the writing, as always, and I liked Ginny and Ellis. Oliver I grew to tolerate but I never quite forgot how he came to be involved in the whole adventure, with the blackmailing and all. Keith was a major disappointment and a somewhat baffling turn of events. I did like seeing how everything tied together, and Ginny’s final decision at the end of the book. It felt natural and strong and empowering, and I really did love seeing her go through with it. I would reccomend that fans of Thirteen Little Blue Envelopes read the sequel, but with some very strong reservations. It’s a good ending to Ginny’s journey, even if at times it was a little irritating. I’m very much looking forward to Johnson’s next book, The Name of the Star, which is the first in a new series.

  • Brigid ✩

    Alrighty, so it's like midnight. And I could be working on writing my own book right now. Or I could be reading the book I wrote when I was 12, because I took it upon myself to read it again just to get another laugh out of it––it's horrendous and about talking cats. But I'm also sick and I have a terrible headache. Seriously, every time I stand up it feels like someone is hitting me in the back of the head with an axe. And I don't want to make that worse. So, like, I guess I'll write a book review.

    What does this have to do with the book? Um, nothing. I'm just stalling for a while, and complaining because a) I have no one to complain to right now, and b) no one really reads my reviews except Seth. It's rather sad. So Seth, here's another review for you.

    THE LAST LITTLE BLUE ENVELOPE. YAY.

    So, yeah. I love Maureen Johnson. A hecka lot. Not just as an author, but as a person. Recently she led a Twitter-riot against the horrendous Wall Street Journal article
    "Darkness Too Visible" which claimed that YA fiction is oh so dark and disgusting and poisoning the minds of today's youth and making us all cut ourselves, yada yada. I spent like a whole week fuming about this article. So if you want to hear me complain any more about it, just read my
    blog post about it. But anyway, Ms. Johnson started the #YASaves hash tag, which encouraged everyone to share their experiences with YA fiction and how it has helped/inspired them. It was awesome. And she is just ... awesome.

    13 Little Blue Envelopes is the first of her books I ever read. I picked it up thinking it would be some shallow girly beach read that I wouldn't like ... and yeah, I guess it's still kind of shallow and girly, but I found myself strangely sucked into it nonetheless. Who doesn't love a crazy travel-all-over-Europe story, eh? Very cute and addicting book.

    After that, I picked up ... well, pretty much every book she's ever written: Devilish, The Bermudez Triangle, The Key to the Golden Firebird, Suite Scarlett, Scarlett Fever, Girl at Sea ... (And I am eagerly awaiting The Name of the Star––sounds SO EFFING EPIC! AAAH!) All great books. Did I get, like, extremely emotionally invested in any of them? No, not really. But they were all entertaining. (Okay, I lied. I wasn't really into The Key to the Golden Firebird, but I loved the rest of her books.)

    So in a way, The Last Little Blue Envelope kind of brings it full circle, because it reminds me why I love Maureen Johnson in the first place. Now, I was nervous about it. I'm always nervous about sequels––because often times, they suck. Or at least, they're not as good as the first book. Also, this book seemed to come out of nowhere. I didn't get the impression from the first book that it was going to have a sequel, although I guess it left a sort of open-ended conclusion, but––but I like when stories end that way!

    Oh, well. It's a Maureen Johnson book, damn it. So I have to love it.

    And I did like The Last Little Blue Envelope. As much as the first one? Ehhh, probably not as much. But like her other books, it was cute and addicting and over all quite enjoyable.

    *Yawns* GOOD MORNING! So yeah, I fell asleep after writing what you see above ^^ But now I am awake again. So, moving on.

    Where was I? Ah, yes. The Last Little Blue Envelope.

    So, like I was saying, I didn't know 13 Little Blue Envelopes was going to have a sequel; in fact, I suspect it was unplanned. Which only ticks me off a little. I just get annoyed that everything nowadays seems to have a sequel ... just because. A lot of the time, the sequels end up overcomplicating the plot or being a crappy repeat of the first book.

    I didn't think this sequel did either of those things, though. I mean, it wasn't the most fantastic book ever, but it was a fun read.

    So, the premise. We all know how, at the end of the first book, Ginny's backpack got stolen in Greece and hence she lost her dead aunt's last blue envelope. In this book, some mysterious dude named Oliver contacts her to tell her he has found her backpack and so has the envelope. Ginny just hops on over to Europe, because that's what she always does. First thing, she goes to visit Keith (aka love interest from the first book and creator of the brilliant "STARBUCKS: THE MUSICAL") and discovers in the span of about two pages that ... he has a girlfriend named Ellis. DUNH DUNH DUNH. Ah, long distance relationships. They always work out so well.

    What follows is a crazy road trip story as the band of four––Ginny, Oliver, Keith, and Ellis––travel around Europe ... once again.

    Well, what can I say. This is a very charming book. "Charming" is just the perfect word for it, I think.

    The character additions were nice. I was glad Ellis was actually a part of the story and had her own characteristics; she wasn't just a prop to create drama. And actually, there was surprisingly little drama over the whole Keith/Ellis relationship. Sure, Ginny was kind of pissed off but she and Keith really only argued about it once. I guess because the whole thing made sense. And anyway, Ginny had Oliver ... who was also a nice addition.

    I was initially kind of pissed off about his existence. It's kind of like, "I'm bored with the hot guy from the first book, so I created a different hot guy!" (A lot of sequels do this...) But nevertheless, Oliver is pretty cool. He has a photographic memory (or something similar) which seemed a bit unrealistic at times, but then again I don't have a photographic memory so I wouldn't know. This enables him to do useful things like recite Harry Potter books from memory, which he does in a café–-then tells the shocked onlookers that he knows Harry Potter so well because he's Dumbledore. So you know, he gets a hundred awesome points for that. He also apparently has a large penis. (Stop giving me that look ... Maureen Johnson kept saying so! It's just that, he'd be walking around in his underwear and Ginny would be like, 'Can't help but notice.' So, I guess that's realistic.) Also, Keith was being an asshole to him the entire book, so he got my sympathy.

    So, over all, a lovely read, simple but entertaining. Like all Maureen Johnson books, the writing is good, the characters are likable, and the dialogue is witty. She balances humor with tragedy well; I liked how, as in the first book, Aunt Peg's death and her lingering "presence" through her letters made the story bittersweet––with a good message about how we should appreciate small things and take time to notice the beauty of the world.

  • Zephyr

    I honestly liked this one better than the first.

    4.5 stars.

  • The Candid Cover (Olivia & Lori)

    Review to come!

  • Em*Greedy* (Iniya)

    3.5 stars

    The start was not as good as the first one, Till around half, I was not much happy with it... liked it better towards the end.. Lot of unnecessary drama in the beginning...

  • Jenny (jenjenreviews)

    I liked this a lot more than the previous book.

    Full review here:
    https://jenjenreviews.wordpress.com/2...

  • Alyce (At Home With Books)

    *This review contains spoilers for 13 Little Blue Envelopes.*

    The Last Little Blue Envelope has a slightly darker tone than the first book. Ginny is faced with a situation involving an extortionist named Oliver who she knows is not nice (and also might not be safe). She realizes though that she will have to travel with him to fulfill the instructions in the last envelope.

    The boy she met in the first book decides to travel with her and Oliver, and she sees a different side of him that she hadn’t seen before. She begins to wonder who is the more despicable person – the one who is the extortionist or the one who is supposed to be her friend.

    At first I was appalled at the darker tone of this book, but in the long run I ended up liking it just as much as the first. 13 Little Blue Envelopes was full of adventure and discovery, and personal growth as Ginny gains confidence in her ability to navigate through foreign countries. While the second book doesn’t lack those elements, it reflects the journey to maturity we all have to travel, in which we realize that people are not always what they seem, and that people sometimes mature at different paces. Ginny gets to see firsthand how it can take a while to know someone’s true character, and that there can be ugliness if you dig too deep.

    In the end I appreciated that this wasn’t just a re-hash of the same plot from the first book. It was still a fast-paced read, and even with the heavier issues it was by no means a depressing book. The ending is upbeat, and some minor plot threads are not tied up, so I have to wonder if there could possibly be another sequel.

  • Jennifer Holik

    Fast read and so much better than the first book. I will admit that I was waiting throughout the whole book, expecting a big twist that never came. I will say that I am a bit troubled by how... IDK... something... Ginny is. She "falls in love" with people at the drop of the hat and with no basis for her feelings. It's weird. Also, this book made me hate both Oliver and Keith a little bit. Mostly Keith. I do love Ellis though. She's amazing! I hesitate to go into too much detail about why I liked this book so much more than the first, for fear of spoilers but here's what I can say. Ginny seems to have "got it" this time around. She is experiencing a little instead of just doing what's in the letters. She's learned to just go with things, regardless of what happens and how dreadful it seems. I also enjoy that of the various ways the relationships could have progressed in this book, the author chose what she did. That is the big thing that made me give this 4 stars instead of 3.

  • Kaethe

    So the last, stolen, blue envelope makes an appearance and Ginny is off on adventures again. Lovely. Perfect really, with the hostel full of cats.

  • Wendy

    WHUT WHUT! I don't approve in theory, but I know she can do it.

  • Jennifer Brown

    Average young adult story. This should be more of a fantasy novel. (In continuation with the first one) there's no way an 18y.o. girl would make it running around Europe. She does have people with her the whole time in this one, but still. I didn't like Oliver's character in the beginning and how she just went along with everything he wanted. She had absolutely no backbone after everything she went through the summer before. And then the way Keith's character acted was unbelievable (u less Europeans act like that??). The ending was predictable but it gave good closure.

  • Brenda

    This story was simpler to understand than the first one, but I had no patience to read all the traveling going on. So I stopped reading where the four characters were heading to Paris. But this is just me.

    When I first read the summary, I thought Ginny's aunt was alive and going to meet her at the end of the story, but I don't know now and I don't mind to know if Ginny got the last envelope.

  • Completely Melanie

    4.5 Stars

    Review in Wrap Up Vlog to come...

  • Janell Wheeler

    I loved the adventure Ginny's aunt took her on in the last book. I was happy to find out there was another book. What a twist this story took. I was so mad at Keith through most of this book. I was also upset at Oliver. This story is not very realistic, I can't imagine letting a 17 year only roam around Europe on her own, maybe that is just my protective mama bear instincts but I still really enjoyed the story. My heart went out to Ginny & Richard so very much. There were quite a few times where I shed a tear for them. The adventures the Ginny gets to take are amazing and such a life altering experience for her. I like the idea behind it and I loved the ending of this book. Although I really enjoyed the first book this one was much better. I should say the ending was better. I liked seeing how Ginny changed and how all of this came together to create a super story. I loved Richard and I'm really glad by the ending of this book. I'm glad I grabbed it on a whim and I would recommend this to others. This is definitely and learning experience and I hope you enjoy it.