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The Everafter by Amy Huntley
The Everafter by Amy Huntley











The Everafter by Amy Huntley

Overall, there is not a single word that could describe just how much I loved this novel and how I ached for it not to be over when it was. Oh, and let me tell you, there are some very excellently done twists and turns to this novel that even I couldn't always see coming. Secondly, I also enjoyed the message of this book, one that basically says that no matter what you should live your life to the fullest because you never know when it all will be taken away. Also, I enjoyed how Amy allowed us discover the different things that occurred in her life at the same time she did.Īnother part of The Everafter I liked a lot was the premise of how Amy set up the after life in a way that the items you had lost in your life would bring you back to poignant moments in your lifetime. Since, not only was she fully developed, but she was someone I could definitely see myself being friends with in real life, because I admired her ability to always want the best for her friends even when it didn't always benefit her. The Everafter was a book that was not just beautifully written, but also had a premise like almost none I've seen before. 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. 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.

The Everafter by Amy Huntley

Madison Stanton doesn't know where she is or how she got there. When she finally figures out how she died she journeys to the Everafter with dead Gabe.Summary/Cover Image from Publisher's Website:

The Everafter by Amy Huntley

The clues that she gets leads her to figure out how she died, and understands more about the Everafter (Heaven/ Hell). We meet her boyfriend Gabe and his alcoholic father, Maddy’s pregnant sister, and her best friend Sandra who is emotionally abused and controlled by her insane mother. She finds some clues in these flashbacks when she replays her first kiss, a middle school slumber party, and a fight with her boyfriend. If she finds the object while she’s visiting then she can’t go back, but if she doesn’t she can continue to travel back to this memory. She finds objects she lost throughout her life that act as portals back to the moment she lost each one. How? Why? Where is she? What’s next? She doesn’t know. Seventeen-year-old Madison Stanton knows she's dead. I loved it! I'm 13 and honestly I don't think there is anything bad about this book! I read the Everafter and was creeped out as well as captured by the spell of Amy Huntley’s amazing page turning suspense novel.













The Everafter by Amy Huntley