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Every You, Every Me - Community Reviews back

by David Levithan, Jonathan Farmer
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The Last Reader
The Last Reader rated it 10 years ago
“You know one me. Just like I know one you. But you can’t know every me. And I can’t know every you.” I keep reading because I’m eager to know what will happen in the end and I tried to finish it in one sitting but I wasn’t able to. So I spent another day to find out where the story will take me. ...
STARSZBOOKS
STARSZBOOKS rated it 11 years ago
This book was very strange. I think the subject would have hit home more if I knew someone who was mentally disturbed personally. This book gives me great insight though. And now I know what a fractal is.
The Girl Who'll Read Anything
The Girl Who'll Read Anything rated it 11 years ago
Let me get straight to the point okay? It was no Every Day but this book is still good because LEVITHAN. I love his writing. I love that style of his that really gets to your mind, heart and even your nerves. Like sometimes it frustrates me how I've never thought of that before but then I still love...
philoSophie
philoSophie rated it 12 years ago
i liked the plot and evan's narration, which was chaotic and fit perfectly with the concept, but all in all, i didn't get attached to any of the characters and that was a bit sad. however, the daunting photos of ariel and the fact that the story wasn't unravelled until the very end made me want to k...
madbkwm
madbkwm rated it 13 years ago
I really liked the first 2/3rds of this book; the tone was compelling, Evan was a great voice/narrator and there are some great comments. Teen angst is always interesting and the mystery here makes for a good read. However, I thought that Evan's similarity to Ariel in his quest for Truth and as ev...
popsiclesinbed
popsiclesinbed rated it 13 years ago
I appreciate David Levithan's creativity and his experimentation with different narrative forms, and I won't stop reading them, though they often don't work for me. (The Lover's Dictionary was like this too). This book was haunting and creepy - Evan, the photographs, and the mystery were all these t...
~Sandee*Stuck in Wonderland~
~Sandee*Stuck in Wonderland~ rated it 13 years ago
This book would not be my first encounter with David Levithan. The first book I read of his was Lover’s Dictionary which I loved completely because of how he unconventionally told the story of the lovers whose names were never mentioned (their gender was never mentioned too). Every You, Every Me was...
Lost in Books
Lost in Books rated it 13 years ago
4.5Vor wenigen Tagen hatte ich insgeheim schon etwas bedauert, dass mich Thriller nicht mehr wirklich begeistern können und es mir scheint, als würden sich viele Autoren einfach nur bekannter Strukturen bedienen, das etwas umändern und fertig. Das mag zwar für zwischendurch nett sein, aber mehr auch...
Jenuine Cupcakes
Jenuine Cupcakes rated it 13 years ago
I had high hopes for this book because I'd heard really positive things about the author's other work but honestly, this book was a struggle to get through. I'm all for teen angst but there seemed to be an exorbitant amount in this story and it left me physically drained.There's a big mystery surrou...
mayhap
mayhap rated it 13 years ago
The purity, the obsessiveness, the almost solipsism of the narrative voice that drives this book is some of Levithan's most gorgeous writing, but I think the way the story was composed ultimately lets the story down.When I read, in the postscript, that his photographer-collaborator had sent him pict...
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