Take a trip back to Y2K with this nostalgic, messy and utterly beautiful love story…
It's the year 2000. I'm fourteen. I'm trying really hard to be a grunger right now. There are rumours the world is going to end. It hasn't as of yet but I still have reasons to believe it's true.
Readers LOVE I Love You, I Love You, I Love You
'The nostalgic book of my dreams' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
'I was crying along to their heartache and cheering along to their triumph' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
'Hilarious, heart-breaking and swoon-worthy' ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
❤ ❤ ❤
Ella and Lowe are teenagers when they first meet in summer 2000. For her, it’s love at first sight. But it’s safest to love from afar, where the friendship zone is her safety net and she can’t get hurt.
Certain that the most beautiful boy she's ever seen couldn't possibly feel the same, Ella counts herself lucky to have him as her best friend. Over the next fifteen years they share everything: bottles of cider and cigarettes in the rain, gossip and laughter, grief and fear.
But every time Lowe kisses another girl, Ella feels her heart break just that little bit more. She'll have to choose whether it's enough to be just friends with the love of her life, or if she's prepared to let the terrifying, beautiful, all-consuming truth come to light.
From a unique new voice in adult fiction, I Love You, I Love You, I Love You is a glorious nostalgia trip for anyone who has ever known the exquisite pain and pleasure of first love.
❤ ❤ ❤
Perfect for fans of:
❤️ Friends to lovers
❤️ Slow burn
❤️ Found family
❤️ Second chances
❤️ Celebrity romance
Praise for I Love You, I Love You, I Love You
‘So visceral, nostalgic, mucky, heartbreaking and bittersweet. Just DELICIOUS.' Kirsty Capes
'A transporting, technicolour plunge into first, and enduring, love.' Sophie Dahl
'Glorious and tender, evocative and heart nourishing.' Salena Godden
‘A spectacular, funny portrayal of being young and in love.’ Woman & Home
'An ode to the bittersweet feeling of first love.' Woman's Own
About the author
Laura Dockrill is an award-winning children’s author, illustrator, script-writer and performance poet who has been shortlisted for the Waterstones’ Book of the Year prize and twice been nominated for the Carnegie Medal. As a poet she is a poet-in-residence for Radio 1. As a script-writer she co-wrote Goldfish which was nominated for the BAFTA for Best British Short in 2020. As a playwright her work has been seen at the Bush Theatre, the Royal Festival Hall and the Young Vic, and she has published an adult memoir called What Have I Done? which detailed her struggles with post-partum psychosis and for which she is now writing a TV series script.
She is on the advisory panel at The Ministry Of Stories, was the writer in residence for Booktrust and has judged many literary prizes. She is also the founder of ‘This Is Not a Female Tribe’, a networking session for women in the arts. She grew up in Brixton, attended the Brit School and still lives in London with her husband and son.