Okay, so about the books and without going into too much spoily detail: It's, um, not so much that there's continuous fall out or anything? Seyonne spends most of the book caught up in plot - with occasional emo musings on how much it sucks that Aleksander hates him now and everything - so Aleksander doesn't come back in until near the end. There's a fairly quick resolution after that, though, fwiw.
I was totally annoyed by that whole situation, too. Things like that always feel so inorganic to the world and the characters. It's glaringly obvious that the author needs some sort of conflict and just reaches in and manipulates things to get it.
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Okay, so about the books and without going into too much spoily detail: It's, um, not so much that there's continuous fall out or anything? Seyonne spends most of the book caught up in plot - with occasional emo musings on how much it sucks that Aleksander hates him now and everything - so Aleksander doesn't come back in until near the end. There's a fairly quick resolution after that, though, fwiw.
I was totally annoyed by that whole situation, too. Things like that always feel so inorganic to the world and the characters. It's glaringly obvious that the author needs some sort of conflict and just reaches in and manipulates things to get it.