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nightwalkerr 's review for:
Say You'll Remember Me
by Abby Jimenez
emotional
inspiring
lighthearted
reflective
sad
slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven:
A mix
Strong character development:
Yes
Loveable characters:
Yes
Diverse cast of characters:
Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus:
No
Insta love, fated mates, long distance, vet, sick parent
MMC: Dr Xavier Rush; 29
FMC: Samantha Diaz; 28
3.75⭐️ I wished they was more romantic stuff and seeing them in their mundane ways after finally getting together but it was nice. Imagine you met the love of your life and have an epic first date and you all know this is it, this is what everyone is searching for but oops you are moving the next day across the country to help take care of you mom who has dementia. Where do you go from there…
“It wasn’t chemistry getting in the way, it was just logistics. Really shitty, very legitimate logistics.”
I loved the perspective about having parallel lines with your partner and how it all comes down to the memories and remembering them especially the mundane things.
“there is nothing more beautiful than being a witness to someone’s life. To know them inside and out and be with them through everything, share the same memories. Memories are everything. I want that.”
“I want someone who knows everything there is to know about me, and I want to know everything about them. I want to be able to say one out-of-context comment to someone and they get what it means and they laugh and it’s just some stupid joke from like eleven years ago that means nothing to anyone else.”
““You can’t fake that kind of thing,” she said, softly. “It’s the result of a parallel life. A shared collection of experiences, like a snowball rolling downhill, getting bigger as it goes. And then you get to a point where you’re so far in, you can never replace that person.”
“You think that it’s the big memories you should be chasing—and it is in a way. Birthdays and vacations and special occasions. But the small memories are the fabric of your life, the ones so inconsequential that you don’t even remember them. You just remember how you felt when you were making them.”
“It’s weird knowing what’s going to be in your end-of-life montage, as it’s happening. But I already knew when my life flashed before my eyes, the best parts of it were going to be about her.”
MMC: Dr Xavier Rush; 29
FMC: Samantha Diaz; 28
3.75⭐️ I wished they was more romantic stuff and seeing them in their mundane ways after finally getting together but it was nice. Imagine you met the love of your life and have an epic first date and you all know this is it, this is what everyone is searching for but oops you are moving the next day across the country to help take care of you mom who has dementia. Where do you go from there…
“It wasn’t chemistry getting in the way, it was just logistics. Really shitty, very legitimate logistics.”
I loved the perspective about having parallel lines with your partner and how it all comes down to the memories and remembering them especially the mundane things.
“there is nothing more beautiful than being a witness to someone’s life. To know them inside and out and be with them through everything, share the same memories. Memories are everything. I want that.”
“I want someone who knows everything there is to know about me, and I want to know everything about them. I want to be able to say one out-of-context comment to someone and they get what it means and they laugh and it’s just some stupid joke from like eleven years ago that means nothing to anyone else.”
““You can’t fake that kind of thing,” she said, softly. “It’s the result of a parallel life. A shared collection of experiences, like a snowball rolling downhill, getting bigger as it goes. And then you get to a point where you’re so far in, you can never replace that person.”
“You think that it’s the big memories you should be chasing—and it is in a way. Birthdays and vacations and special occasions. But the small memories are the fabric of your life, the ones so inconsequential that you don’t even remember them. You just remember how you felt when you were making them.”
“It’s weird knowing what’s going to be in your end-of-life montage, as it’s happening. But I already knew when my life flashed before my eyes, the best parts of it were going to be about her.”