Say What You Will Audiobook By Cammie McGovern cover art

Say What You Will

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Say What You Will

By: Cammie McGovern
Narrated by: Rebecca Lowman
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About this listen

I want someone who will talk to me honestly about things. You're the only person who ever has. Maybe you don't know this, but when you're disabled almost no one tells you the truth. They feel too awkward because the truth seems too sad, I guess. You were very brave to walk up to the crippled girl and say, essentially, wipe that sunny expression off your face and look at reality. That's what I want you to do next year. Tell me the truth. That's all.

Amy and Matthew didn't know each other, really. They weren't friends. Matthew remembered her, sure, but he remembered a lot of people from elementary school that he wasn't friends with now.

Matthew never planned to tell Amy what he thought of her cheerful facade, but after he does, Amy realizes she needs someone like him in her life.

As they begin to spend more time with each other, Amy learns that Matthew has his own secrets and she decides to try to help him in the same way he's helped her. And when what started out as a friendship turns into something neither of them expected, they realize that they tell each other everything - except the one thing that matters most.

©2014 Cammie McGovern (P)2014 HarperCollinsPublishers
Contemporary Contemporary Romance Disabilities Friendship Illness & Health Problems Romance Young Adult
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What listeners say about Say What You Will

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Smart, Quirky, All the Feels

This book features two outsiders that form a friendship so I totally get the Eleanor & Park (and The Fault in Our Stars) comparison you see in the official description. If you like those books you will probably like this book as well, though Cammie McGovern forges her own path with her novel.

Amy has cerebral palsy, uses a walker to get around and a voice tablet to communicate. She excels in school in every area except socially, and aims to remedy that in her senior year of high school. She convinces her mom to hire peer aides instead of a professional aide to help her out at school as a way to break the ice and make some friends. She particularly wants Matthew to apply because he’s the only person that really sees her and tells it like it is. Matthew, along with four other students/aides, alternate days with Amy, and before long their connection deepens. Matthew’s OCD tendencies work in his favor to make him an attentive and thorough aide, though Amy wants him to set his sights higher.

Amy and Matthew both have their challenges to overcome, though McGovern shows that they have the same hopes and dreams as everyone else. Everyone has their issues, as we see in Amy and Matthew’s friendship circle, and some are just more visible than others.

With the trend being alternating first-person pov, it’s refreshing that McGovern chooses third person pov for Say What You Will. I still was able to connect to both Amy and Matthew, though the third person format also created a barrier that was somehow appropriate to the story. McGovern does a great job of keeping the tension up throughout the novel, through distance, and other twists in the narrative. This is an emotional book that I thought about even when I wasn’t reading it. I still kind of wish McGovern didn’t have to go there with the twist in this novel, though I get that it made sense for the characters to go through this challenge.

Rebecca Lowman (Eleanor & Park) performs the audiobook, furthering the E&P comparison. Lowman’s voice works well for mature YA titles like this, and I like listening to her because her vocal work complements the story and doesn’t detract. I did speed up the audiobook though to about 1.5x since this was a “re-read” for me – the audio quality was still good at that speed so take from that what you will. In the book there are some email and text exchanges between Matthew and Amy so if that is a pet peeve for your audio listening (hearing the email addresses called out several times) you may want to pick up the print edition. I didn’t find it annoying personally.

Listen to Say What You Will if you like: Smart contemporary YA, quirky characters, books that challenge you, and a side of dramarama in your stories.

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3 people found this helpful

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Woah!

This is a love story between two unlikely people, each with their own complicated lives. It really hits home on several topics. Very eye opening. It reminded me of "Out of My Mind" but with older characters. I think every high schooler should read it.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Great story

I fell in love with the characters. I think the author has a great sense of humor. Not depressing and very thought provoking.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Realistic, complex characters with realistic disability representation.

I loved this book. The characters are well-rounded and their story is plausible. The characters have disabilities, but the story isn’t only about their disabilities and it also doesn’t just identify their disabilities and then ignore them. Their disabilities aren’t just a plot point, but rather integral to who they are as characters. The story also doesn’t infantilize the disabled characters and addresses adult themes that many authors are scared to address in books featuring disabled characters. It’s beautifully written and the story is compelling.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Excellent YA Start to Your Summer

Amy and Matthew find each other through odd circumstances. Matthew is one of a few paid peers who assist Amy with her daily needs in her last year of high school, as she has cerebral palsy. The goal is for her to excel socially as she currently does academically.

While she's being challenged, Amy also encourages Matthew to face some of his issues and together they develop a deep friendship over the span of a year and a half. "Say What You Will" is not a woe-is-me sad melodrama where the cool kid falls for the wallflower. Both characters navigate their strengths and weaknesses with honest gut-wrenching interactions.

This is a smart, lovely story with winding dialogue keeping you glued to your earphones/speakers to see how it ends. McGovern is being compared to John Green, but this book is more akin to "Wonder". Excellent read if you haven't yet.

This is an easy, enjoyable listen, not just for teens and Rebecca Lowman is a fabulous narrator.

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48 people found this helpful

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

I will say: it was ok.

Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?

Sort of. I enjoyed the time I spent listening, but (for me) it was not one of those books that causes you to sit in your car long after you've reached your destination, so that you can hear more.

Would you recommend Say What You Will to your friends? Why or why not?

Probably not. It's a typical YA boy-meets-girl-boy-loses-girl type of story.

Any additional comments?

Having characters with CP and OCD was interesting, but aside from that, I felt that there wasn't anything terribly new or exciting about this story.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Life in a different view

Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?

The story is surprising yet it is able to keep the reader hooked to find out what happens next

What did you like best about this story?

The surprises

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