I was so excited Levithan was writing another book. I got like this:
But shortly after it was released I went to Barnes and Noble to see if they had it and they didn't! They had new copies of Alexandra Adornetto's awful sequel to Halo (*shivers*), Hades and a bunch of copies Tyra Bank's Modelland, but not Every You, Every Me! I was so excited to go get it, but my dreams were crushed! I was having a Zoidberg moment (I seem to be getting those a lot):I was so mad. I had to wait a couple months for the library to get it, and I was so glad when I did! I was like this:
So I began reading it.
Evan has problems. His friend Ariel ad to leave him behind and he's having social and mental issues. He's getting photographs from someone who he's afraid is Ariel. He tries letting others know about it, but it isn't working. He couldn't sleep before, now it seems impossible. And Evan might just leave like Ariel. . .
This was a fantastic psychological thriller. This is not regular Levithan, but still amazing. He clearly understands how mental illness works and he wrote it perfectly. You knew exactly how Evan felt. I also thought the writing was very good and the photos were interesting.
You can't help feeling bad for Evan. This is a painful to read story that's so true to life. He was human, just like all the other characters. I also felt bad for Ariel. I realized even more I know very little about some of the closest people I know.
This was amazing. I loved this novel even if it's so different from Levithan's other works, but still so memorable.
5 stars.
You can't help feeling bad for Evan. This is a painful to read story that's so true to life. He was human, just like all the other characters. I also felt bad for Ariel. I realized even more I know very little about some of the closest people I know.
This was amazing. I loved this novel even if it's so different from Levithan's other works, but still so memorable.
5 stars.
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