Ratings128
Average rating3.4
Lou listened to Will. And then somehow not after all. She mourns and doesn't dare take any bigger steps. But when Will's supposed daughter turns up, her life is turned upside down once again. What Jojo Moyes does with Lou is like a rollercoaster ride, first and foremost of emotions. The book is peppered with good twists and turns. It brought me tears of joy and sadness in equal measure, the latter especially towards the end. The usual humour of the first book was followed up well. Also the drama. Nevertheless, it is - somehow understandably - not up to the first book. On the other hand, I enjoyed Lou's further steps in her life extraordinarily. She is a very special character.
After reading Me Before You and loving it and hearing what everyone was saying about the sequel I put off reading this book for along time. While I didn't enjoy this one as much as I did Me Before you I still ended up enjoying it and thinking it was ok.
I don't have a whole lot to say about this book. A lot of what went down in this book annoyed me. Lou was very whiny in the beginning but she eventually started standing up for herself which I loved. The way her family reacted to a certain decision Lou made really pissed me of. While I do see where they were coming from I think what Lou did was the right thing and I applaud her. Also the way other adults acted and treated a certain character grated on my nerves. I'm trying to spoil anything so that's why this is very vague.
While I had my issues with this book and I definitely don't think it was needed after Me Before I still found myself immersed into the story wanting to know how things ended up. Of course this ended on a cliffhanger which you know not my favorite thing ever but I do eventually want to read the final book Still Me.
I was so unsure about even reading this book, honestly. I didn't feel like Me Before You needed a sequel. But I'm glad that I was proven wrong. After You was lovely and sweet. Maybe it didnt bring me to my knees sobbing but it was very sweet to be able to follow Louisa as she learned how to move forward. I love that in this series, all the characters have a story. Side characters aren't just pieces of furniture in Lou's life; they have their own lives and stories and character development.
After You was sweet and calm and lovely and now I want to follow Louisa onto her next adventure in Still Me.
I was happy to go along with this twee series until I reached the surprise in Chapter 5. Nope. Too much.
I loved this book. Moyes is such a gifted writer. You definitely want to read Me Before You before you read this one, since After You is a sequel to that. Also, you'll want to read Me Before You before you read the rest of my review, since I'm about to give away the ending to that book.
You have been warned.
After You begins with Louisa still in mourning eighteen months after the death of Will, a man she loved dearly. She works at a horrible job and attends a group to deal with loss, but it takes meeting Lily and paramedic Sam and several trials and tribulations with their lives, her family member's lives, and her own life to begin to move Louisa forward. This book, like Me Before You, has romantic elements, but unlike some romance novels, you definitely can't figure out how the hero and heroine's story will conclude—how they will overcome obstacles and either get together or not—until the very end.
Though this deals with the difficult topic of grief and loss, like Moyes' other books, there are several humorous, chuckle-inducing moments as well as parts of the book that brought tears to my eyes. I couldn't more highly recommend this book.
I know a lot of people did not like this book, and if you are looking for a second Me Before You, I agree. but I tend to read books individually. For me it's like having a conversation with an old friend, you know who they are, but you don't know what they are going to say.
After You was excatly what I wanted from Lou. I was not happy with the perfect Paris ending of Me Before You, because she had to be destroyed I imagined! and After You delivered on the realness of her emotions.
I think the problem people have with Jojo's books is that it is human, it is raw and we want a fairytale, a happy ending. I appreciated the rawness and reality of After You and it is my favourite sequel of the year!!
It wasn't bad.
Me Before You was just a lot better. I liked all of the characters, but the plot felt a little too forced at times, and that was probably my biggest gripe with the book.
As we approach the release date for the movie adaptation of Jojo Moyes book ‘Me Before You' I took time a week or so ago to watch the trailer of the film and was immediately reminded of the sadness, joy and overall greatness of the story of Will and Louisa who fall in love in unusual and very difficult circumstances. It comes at a time where Moyes is also releasing this book to the world, ‘After You' the story of how Louisa is coping after the assisted suicide of her love Will.
It was always going to be difficult to trump the original story, after all we did fall in love with Will Traynor alongside Louisa and cried with her when he ended his life in a Swiss Dignitas clinic. It was such an iconic love story that they have achieved the status shared by famous book couples like Darcy and Elizabeth, Bridget Jones and Mark Darcy, Heathcliff and Cathy. For our generation we had Louisa and Will and no matter how Moyes wrote her sequel there was going to be as big a hole in which her readers hearts as her main character was living through. The absence of Will was palpable, you could feel it from beginning to end.
The opening of the book finds Louisa involved in a fairly major accident herself and she meets a paramedic called Sam. As a result of her family questioning whether her accident was in fact a result of her grief she also begins attending a grief support group. With a dead end job and few friends Lou feels she is letting Will down because she promised him that she would live a full life.
The most interesting aspect of the book for me though was the arrival of 17 year old Lily in Lou's life and the announcement that she is Will's daughter. For me this story was the most heartfelt part as Lou tries to introduce Lily to her grandparents and learning as she goes the trials of parenting a teen with a host of problems and parents who seem to have disowned her. The blossoming friendship between Lily and Lou is for me the only parts where I became so drawn in that my mind wasn't wandering a little.
The story was about 50% amazing and 50% chic lit filling, I wanted Lou to do something monumental and to find true happiness, instead I felt the story set itself up for possibly another book in a series, the story didn't feel complete. Lou seems to be off on a grand adventure and I suspect we may get to join her but I ask myself if some of this books characters didn't come along for the ride would I miss them and Lily aside I'd have to be honest and say I wouldn't. I felt Lou has yet to find the same depth of emotional connection as she had with Will.
I haven't been surprised to read mixed reviews on this book as I suspect like me many people just didn't connect emotionally with it as much as they did with its predecessor, no tears this time, I'll need to save them for the cinema when I go to watch the movie of Me Before You.
Life after Will Traynor sucks. If you finished MBY imagining that Louisa is off seeing the world and living her life to the fullest, you're better off pretending that this sequel doesn't exist.
I actually enjoyed After You (AY), unlike many GR readers who seem to consider it a weak sequel to (or in some cases, even a betrayal of) the beloved Me Before You (MBY). Granted, AY doesn't grab your heart and rip it out of your chest like MBY, but would you really want it to? Could you survive that level of emotional pain again? I feel like Moyes was in an impossible situation - readers clamoring to know what happened to Louisa after Will's death and probably knowing in her heart of hearts that literary lightning like MBY only strikes once. But I think she does have some worthwhile things to say about moving on after loss, and I think it's more realistic to portray Louisa when AY opens as stuck in a rut, than to think that some money from Will and a trip to Paris at the end of MBY solved all of her problems permanently.
I don't want to give too much away about the plot except to say that Moyes does bring out a few cliched plot points that would be wall-bangers in a less talented author's hands. I did groan when Louisa literally pleaded with Sam to stay with her when he got shot, and he told her later that her voice helped him fight to live. And I could have done without the slapstick subplot about her middle-aged traditional mom finding feminism, and the predictable response from her bemused dad.
But overall I was glad to spend time with Louisa Clark again, watch her make her peace with Will's decision to die, and rejoice in her decisions to fully embrace life and love.