


The only thing I really would have liked to know is answers to a few questions that arise during the book. Every scene with the 2 of them was perfect, never being too much. The scenes with Maddy and Gabe were my favorite. Amy Huntley's creativity shows through on every page.

The secondary characters were all extremely well written. All the secondary characters give you a clue as to who Madison is and why she is that way. Through these moments, you really get to know Madison and you see who shaped her life. Every object Madison found you were thrown into a random point in her life - you never knew which part of her life you'd be headed to next. It was such an interesting concept of after death - going back and reliving moments of objects you lost. All the pain of change and loss those make you realize how much you love the things you have. Amy Huntley draws you in with her first sentence, "I'm Dead" and doesn't let you go, only sucks you in further and further. Maybe instead of fire and brimstone, hell is just a feeling of loneliness, The way you’re feeling right now makes you appreciate all the good times you have. The Everafter is a totally unique book that's not quite like anything else I've ever read. In reliving these moments, Maddy learns illuminating and sometimes frightening truths about her life-and death.

And soon she discovers that with these artifacts, she can re-experience-and sometimes even change-moments from her life: Her first kiss. The only company she has in this place are luminescent objects that turn out to be all the things Maddy lost while she was alive. Gilbert demonstrates that she can present multiple characters (such as in The Hobbit) as wonderfully as this (mostly) first person narrative I will be impressed indeed.Madison Stanton doesn't know where she is or how she got there. Rob Inglis (Lord of the Rings) is my current number one. Tavia Gilbert is one of the best narrators I've heard and I've listened to a hundred or so books over the last 15 years. My only criticism is the story is too short! I wanted to learn more about Madison's past, her future, and the strange place she found herself in. Different, imaginative, and very well written. (Spoiler, sort of) It doesn't get any more conventional as the story proceeds. You might not require more mature to spend. This is all revealed in the first few pages. This is likewise one of the factors by obtaining the soft documents of this The Everafter. These objects allow here to briefly return to the time and place where she lost them. After a bit she can see points of light, which, upon closer examination turn out to be objects she lost during her lifetime (sweatshirt, bracelet.). Madison awakes in a bubble floating in nowhere, she has no body and at first no sensations. This is a book about the Afterlife, or perhaps the pre-Afterlife is a better term. Where does The Everafter rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?
