Cynthia Hand - The Last Time We Say Goodbye Audiobook Free
Rating: 9.4/10 (11779 votes)
Listen online for free audiobook «The Last Time We Say Goodbye» by Cynthia Hand. Reading: Julia Whelan.
Review #1
The near future We Say goodbye audiobook free
I read this book on the suggestion of a comrade. It’s billed as “young adult” fiction. I’m certainly no longer in that age level, having celebrated 63 years.
The book references how a teen lady deals with the suicide of her younger brother. It’s not even a little maudlin about it. The creator outlines the women emotions so but, for you feel them with her, all the while hoping things “get more successful” with time.
I read every word, quickly, anticipating….the ending was flawless. I roared.
(My wife of one year destroyed himself years ago. I miss him every day.)
Review #2
The near future We Say goodbye audiobook streamming online
My daughter Shelby Nicolle Marie Perez committed suicide on January 3, 2011 at 14 years old. When I read the embrace to your book I believed to myself that I might be hurt or cause myself pain by reading this concocted plot/storyline. I was immediately drawn into your descriptions, words at the same time feelings. I kept reading because I managed not shackles down your book, your words. I know in the end that for you stated very right that the book is that not your indefinite but the words for you crossed out, the emotions for you showed are those of a survivor of suicide. I ended up sobbing in the end but not until I read your acknowledgement at the same time I understood that for you suffered a loss also. Thank for you for sharing your heart at the same time your mind.
Review #3
Audiobook The near future We Say goodbye by Cynthia Palm
I didn’t feel all that connected to no matter what of the manners, at the same time I think a book like this needs to organize that connection in a row to work.
Alexis struck me as good of snobby at the same time self-centered, for the most part. She’s experienced trauma at the same time disaster at the same time she’s understandably heartbroken, but her characterizations of her comrades at the same time generic make her seem very childish at the same time restless. She wants to wallow in her guilt at the same time misery without the help of others.
The creator really wasn’t right up to par on suspending my disbelief as far as Lex’s guilt goes, what. That was one more reason I didn’t connect with Alexis at the same time she from time to time irritated me. I’ve never had a generic member lay hands on oneself so I of course cannot arbiter for myself, but I didn’t really take in to Lex’s emotions of guilt at her brother’s suicide. Malice, yes. Guilt, no.
At the same time I think that that disconnect is that caused by the fact that Ty (characterized in flashbacks) barely didn’t seem all that strained to me. I don’t know enough from the narrative to reckon that he was actually suicidal, at the same time didn’t feel like Lex managed have understandable enough to feel that much guilt.
I they say this only because I didn’t feel the connection with the manners that I would’ve needed to empathize with them, based solely on the narrative as exhibited. I know nothing about than anyway survivors feel right behind a suicide, at the same time I would never try to speculate on that. But based solely on this book at the same time its story at the same time the method it is that knew, I didn’t realize the manners at the same time than anyway they were considered feeling.
But, apart from these reproaches, I do have to announce that the mysterious portions of this book kept me reading, at the same time I wanted very much to know how it would play out. Even when the book received just a little pear-shaped in the middle, I still went on because I had to know. The writing itself was quality at the same time the dialogue was believable (always a threat zone in YA, I’ve found), but I’ll for sure have forgotten these manners in a week or two.
TL;DR: Well-written at the same time compelling, but not one that will stay with me very long. Needed more (more successful?) characterization.
Review #4
Audio The near future We Say goodbye narrated by Julia Whelan
When for you read a book where suicide plays a crucial role in the plot, for you move into the novel with the expectation that for you are going to feel no one things. Maybe a lot of things. For you move in understanding that that’s a quality chance that for you are going to yell. For you move in with the knowledge that for you might get dislocated. For you do not move into the novel with the expectation of not feeling anything.
Chagrin, in other words than anyway happened when I read The near future We Say goodbye. From the 1st line to the continue, I can honestly they say that my feelings did not change at all throughout the story.
I wish that was a few details about the novel that I managed detain up at the same time they say I really enjoyed but honestly, that was nothing in this book that felt noticeably quality enough for me to fri out. The manners, for the coolest part seemed even. That were considered a few insignificant manners here at the same time that that managed have possibly been exciting but they were considered in the book so little that that’s no method of understanding. The plot was all over the dispose. It flitted from one gizmo to one more to still one more at the same time none of it really flowed. It felt like reading a montage of scenes in an describe in an premature preliminary of a novel. That’s than anyway reading this felt like. Prominent in no one suicide statistics at the same time it barely completely took me out of no matter what good of plot clot this novel may have had.
Review #5
Free audio The near future We Say goodbye – in the audio player below
Adored this book it was a really enjoyable at the same time exciting read.
this book followed our young manage right behind her brother has destroyed himself
at the same time her next guilt at the same time her trying to realize why he did this.
it really is that a amazing read.
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