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Mass Market Paperback Would You Book

ISBN: 1770492232

ISBN13: 9781770492233

Would You

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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Book Overview

A summer night. A Saturday. For Claire, this summer feels fantastic because she'll be zooming off to college in the fall. For her younger sister, Natalie, it's an okay time with her friends: summer jobs, then hanging out. Fun mostly, but nothing special.

A summer night. An accident. Life changes in a heartbeat.

In Would You, Marthe Jocelyn tells a haunting story of tragedy and loss, of how one day can shape the next and at the...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Courtesy of Teens Read Too

"Would you rather know what's going to happen or not know?" This is the question that starts the powerful story that is WOULD YOU. Natalie is Claire's younger sister. Claire has just graduated from high school and she's ready to begin the next chapter of her life. She has told Natalie that she is going to break up with her boyfriend, Joe, that night. But that night, everything changes. Nat and her friends sit around at the Ding Dong Diner discussing "would you" questions with each other. Little does Natalie know that the opening question would hit so close to home. As Natalie is riding her bike home one night during the summer, she passes cops putting up police tape on Devon Road. She doesn't think anything of it until she gets home. There she finds out that her sister has been in an accident. She is still alive, but the doctors aren't very optimistic. WOULD YOU tells the story of Nat's family over the course of a week during one summer. It explores the turmoil that Nat goes through, as well as the despair and struggles of her parents. Nat feels guilty for some of the thoughts that go through her head. Her friends have a hard time with the situation as well, and constantly stop themselves from saying the wrong things. WOULD YOU is a short story that holds a powerful punch. Long after the cover has been closed, the reader will be pondering the opening question...would you rather know or not? Would it change anything? Reviewed by: Jaglvr

The intriguing book you can't put down

This book Would You, by Marthe Jocelyn is and intriguing story about the life of a teenage girl, Natalie, whose life is turned upside down when her sister Claire is hit by a car and is in the hospital in a coma. Natalie thought she was going to have a fun summer with her sister and friends before her sister goes off to college in the fall, but that all changes in the blink of an eye. Everything changes for Natalie and her family when Claire is declared brain dead and taken off life support. Natalie and Claire both have a lot of friends, but Natalie's favorite thing to do with her friends is go pool hopping. Which is when you sneak over to someone's house and jump in the pool, then run away before you get caught, Natalie and her friends never imagined when they rode there bikes past a car accident one night after doing that, that it would involve Claire. Jocelyn has written a lot of other books, including the series about "Hannah's Collections" which is based on her daughter Hannah. "Would You" was very good, but there is one thing that I would change, after Claire went into her coma it went on and on about how sad everyone was and I thought that was a little boring. Overall it was a very good book that i recommend to everyone.

a realistic, thoughtful exploration of the kinds of tough choices that run through people's heads du

It's the summer before junior year, and as Natalie endures the start of the year's first heat wave, she says, "Summer just started and it's already boring." She thinks ahead to a long, lazy summer, lifeguarding at the YMCA, sneaking into absent neighbors' backyards to use their pools late at night, and just spending time with her friends at the Ding-Dong diner. Natalie has smart friends who tease each other gently, engage in harmless flirtations and challenge each other with hypothetical, and sometimes gross, moral dilemmas (for example: "Would you rather eat a rat with the fur still on or eat sewage straight from the pipe?"). Natalie's summer will be fine, she guesses, but she knows that at the end of it, her beautiful, brilliant older sister Claire will be off to college. Claire is embracing her future, telling Natalie at the opening of the book, "I have this roar in my head...of anticipation. That it's all just starting. Stuff I don't even know about." As for Natalie, when she imagines Claire leaving for school, she feels sick to her stomach. Claire's future is bright, and her summer is sure to be glorious --- until one second changes things for Claire and her entire family forever. Returning home from a late-night swimming party, Natalie sees police cruisers and ambulances in a nearby neighborhood. She doesn't connect these sirens and flashing lights with herself until she returns home to find her mother and father nearly hysterical with fear and worry. Claire, they say, has been hit by a car, has a severe head injury and is in a coma. Over the next several days, Natalie and her family face moral and ethical dilemmas far more strenuous than anything her friends had cooked up before. She feels guilt over "borrowing" Claire's new black blouse and assuming that Claire's shiny new Apple laptop will be hers soon. She clashes with her mother over the state of her (and Claire's) room and with her father over the possibility of Claire's emergence from the coma and the ability to seek revenge. She feels uncomfortable when she is asked to massage Claire's nearly unrecognizable feet, and finds unexpected moments of grace and clarity when she speaks to her unresponsive sister in the lonely hospital room. After a brain scan reveals the worst possible outcome, Natalie and her parents must answer the most difficult questions of all. There certainly have been plenty of other young adult novels about death and dying, but many of them are unbearably angst-ridden or nauseatingly maudlin and sentimental. WOULD YOU is neither of the above. It is, instead, a realistic, thoughtful exploration of the kinds of tough choices --- and the painful thoughts --- that run through people's heads during moments of tragedy. Although Natalie inevitably compares herself negatively to her golden older sister, readers will recognize her as a bright, articulate, contemplative girl forced to move into a new kind of future before she feels entirely ready. As Natalie says near th

Fantastic book.

I was hesitant to start this book, but as it progressed it became absolutely incredible, and it is a tear jerker in a major way. I read it in one night, it is an easy read, but sends out a powerful message. I would recommend this book to any Middle School or High School girl, since it deals with many differently "weighted" issues.

A heartbreaking story of sudden changes will attract middle school readers

Marthe Jocelyn's WOULD YOU tells of an older sister injured by a car, and four days in which Natalie and her family wait to learn if Claire will ever recover. A heartbreaking story of sudden changes will attract middle school readers. An excellent leisure read for middle school readers.
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