Member Reviews

Thought provoking and timely, given the current #MeToo climate. A family saga that lets you into the lives of those impacted by the decisions of teenagers and how those actions have widespread consequences. This book is very different from any of Giffin's prior books, but important nonetheless. If you are expecting the romance you usually find, this won't be where you will find it, but what you will find is a powerful story about a community and family and a true reminder that all actions have lingering consequences, all while told in Giffin's signature prose.

I received an advance copy. All opinions are my own.

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Another awesome read by Emily Giffin. She writes about bullying/shaming young women and the repercussions as well as elitism and raising children to grow up to be good people, while delivering a story that so many will be able to relate to in one way or another. I couldn't put this one down!

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Nina and her husband are well off. Living the high life after he sells off a tech company. Their son Finch has been accepted into Princeton. Life is perfect until one night at a party there is a photo that is sent of a girl in a compromising position. Was it her son Finch that did this? As the story spirals Nina finds herself realizing that money is not always everything. Nina finds herself reflecting back to a traumatic event in her college days as she tries to figure out what happened. I was not able to put the book down until I finished it. Once again Emily Giffin kept me in suspense and had me glued until the end.

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Teenagers can make some awful decisions. That's just a fact. When Nina's son is accused of doing something to another student she has to decide whether or not to stand behind her son and do anything she can to try and protect his future, or to do what she knows is right.

I really enjoyed this new book by Emily Giffin. I loved the characters, and the subject matter. This book left me wanting more. I wanted the epilogue to go on for about two hundred more pages. Thank you to Netgalley for letting me read an early copy of this book.

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Quick read from Giffin that doesn't disappoint. Book clubs & fans of women's fiction will enjoy.

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Thanks to Random House/Ballantine for the ARC of this novel via Netgalley. I am a huge Emily Giffin fan and have read all of her books, but this is quite the departure from a "Something Borrowed" type novel that she has written in the past. That being said, this novel is really timely and I loved digging into the subject matter. Finch, a white, extremely upper class senior snaps an inappropriate photo at a party and it goes viral. Finch's mom Nina, who was not raised with a silver spoon, goes through the full range of emotions: from disbelief, to denial, anger and certainly at its core, disillusion about who is this child that she has raised. While examining their parenting skills it also draws attention to Nina's marriage and lifestyle, forcing her to examine just what this life of privilege has bought her and her family. I don't want to give any spoilers by talking much about the other characters, not because they aren't a huge part of the story-because they are, I just felt that the most compelling view in this story was Nina's. I think this will make a great book club selection, sure to bring about thought-provoking discussion.

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I really enjoyed this book, told from the POVs of three of the main characters. When an inappropriate picture is shared of Lyla, the daughter of a blue collar single dad who is on scholarship at prestigious Windsor Academy, it sets in motion a chain of events that affect her dad, Tom, Finch (the boy that shared the picture) and his mother, Nina (among others). It remains to be seen throughout the book if Finch's wealth and privilege will get him off the hook or if he is even the one responsible after all.

This book is a little heavier than Giffin's traditional chick lit books, dealing with social media abuse, sexual assault, privilege and what it allows those that have it to get away with, and bullying. It really makes you consider how a lapse of judgement can change so many lives in such devastating ways. Could be a great book club pick!

Thanks to Netgalley for an ARC copy of this book in exchange for a review.

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I love Emily Giffin and she did not disappoint with All We Ever Wanted. First, I adore Nashville so already the setting won me over. The subject matter - a teenager snaps an inappropriate photo of another teen and it gets around - is so topical and I thought Giffin did a good job with the he said/she said and why it's important to speak up no matter how embarrassing. Although Lyla was super annoying (begging her dad to trust her when every single action to that point had been her lying to her dad), the reader could still sympathize. And you know there are definitely people like Kirk and Finch in this world and I glad Giffin had Nina take a stand. I loved this book! Bonus points for the gorgeous cover.

Thanks to NetGalley for the free ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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4.5 stars -- I am not one of those women who automatically love Emily Giffin books. Sometimes I don't love her writing style, sometimes I don't prefer her plots, but sometimes I do. I definitely like her enough to give her books a chance but based on the description I really had no clue if I would like this book or not. I really surprisingly loved this book a lot. I say surprisingly because it's hard for me to describe WHY I liked this book in words. I'll attempt... I loved Nina. I was rooting for her during the whole book and she had me on her side. This book is VERY relevant with the current #metoo movement without being too in your face. The feminist side of me liked the subtle but strong message. I loved that this book felt so real, like I was watching someone's life instead of a made up story by the author. The decisions that Nina made throughout her life seemed SO real to me. I tend to like multi-POV books because I feel it gives you a more in depth understanding of what the characters are thinking and I think it was done well in this book. This was one of the books by Giffin that I enjoyed her writing style.

Now if you ask me if I think all of my friends would give it 4.5 stars I would tell you probably not. It's not a light story and it may not touch others the way it touched me. Parts can be frustrating or disturbing, which I felt added to the "realness" of the story but others may find it less appealing. However, if you like Giffin books or well written women's lit books I would recommend giving this one a try.

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THANK YOU SO MUCH to NETGALLEY and RH/BALLANTINE BOOKS for the ARC!!!! This book was amazing. The subject, story line and characters were so contemporary and so believable. As a parent of two high school teenagers and a sophomore in college, I could absolutely see this entire situation easily happening in my own affluent town where a lot of our life is about who has what rather than character and honesty. I'd like to think that I would be be able to react the same as Nina did in her situation, that my daughters would be like as mature and level-headed as Lyla and my son would never behave like Finch. But I guess I'll never know for sure. Anyways, Nina is mom to Finch who makes a really bad decision in sending a revealing photo with a racist comment to his friends of Lyla, an underclassman at their private prep school--and the photo spreads quickly. The story is told from several points of view including Nina, Finch, Lyla & Lyla's very strong single father Tom. I thought it was going to be about how Nina and her very privileged husband help Finch by getting him released from any punishment that would jeopardize his bright future. But it is NOT. It is about how one mother realizes how her life and family are not based on love, respect, pride, honesty and character but greed and lies. Also covers how parents so want to much to help their kids in any way possible and how their kids in turn do not want to disappoint them. Such an amazing story and lesson here for everyone-I was glued to it from page one. I highly recommend this book!!! This would be an awesome movie and a great book club read! Thanks again for the ARC!!!!!

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Love this author, and I enjoyed the book immensely. I enjoyed seeing how all of the characters were interconnected as the story unfolded. Very entertaining.

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Nina thought she had everything she ever wanted but did she really? When her son uses bad judgment by sending an inappropriate picture to his friends of a girl passed out at a party that goes viral, causing problems for Finch, as well as the Lyla, the girl in the picture, she finds that she and her husband do not agree on how to deal with it. She also begins to question her relationship with her husband and her own life, wondering "where she went". A timely story told in multiple voices that kept me turning the pages as fast as I could. highly recommend.

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Another stunning novel from Emily Giffin! A story about values, morals and what to do when these come into question. Nina questions her own value system when she realises her husband’s values have changed and these changes have influenced her their son. The conclusion was amazing, unexpected and I never saw it coming! A winner!

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Parents want to believe their kids are telling them the truth. Kids don't want to disappoint their parents. Teenagers, however, want to fit in, they want friends, and sometimes teenagers don't always make the best decisions.
Emily Griffin's, "All We Ever Wanted," begins with a posted photo on social media of a sophomore girl of a private high school, passed-out on a bed in a male student's bedroom at a party, along with a racist comment. From this point we are taken on an adventure of mystery and moral discovery. The need to reveal culprits, and the truth is the first priority, but to what extent will parents try to protect their kids from consequences.
Three POVs narrate this book, the mother of the accused boy who took the picture, the father of the girl in the picture, and the girl herself. This is by far Ms. Griffin's best book to date. Expertly written, relevant topic, and page-turner appeal. Highly recommend. Book Clubs will devour this title.

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I loved this book. Check out my non-spoilery review here:

There is so much I loved about this book. It reminds me so much of why I love Emily Giffin's books so much. This story takes big scope subjects and places them in real life situations. The cause and effects of relevant topics and what as a society, we choose to and choose not to address due to societal pressures, wayward internal compasses, or even changes within us. All We Ever Wanted is a shining example of lives touched in different ways by one event and how the characters choose to handle it.

Choices are made without regard to consequences. There are winners and losers and sometimes losers who win. The overwhelming theme to me is that we need to follow our individual hearts to the good of the whole. Our instincts may be to protect, but maybe what we're trying so hard to protect needs to be exposed.

I loved how Giffin caught this moment in time in the lives of so many characters and their flaws and kind deeds are driving us forward through the story. Lovely connections are made as well as some that are heartbreaking.

Through these desperate days, I fell in love with the characters and how they represented the greater population encapsulated in the world of the well to do. There aren't easy answers to their problems, but bravery is found among the ruins. The twists and turns the story took had me holding my breath and then smiling the next. My heart broke and then Giffin healed me in the end.

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I have loved Emily Giffen since “Something Borrowed” and “Something Blue,” two of my favorite books. Her writing has changed a bit along the way with the female main characters becoming strong women overcoming an obstacle in their lives.
This book is about a mom whose son got caught up in social media and whether or not he committed an act against a young woman. Nina, the mom, is also married to a successful, but arrogant man who seems to brush off their son’s actions as “boys will be boys.” At this point, Nina starts to question how her family got to this point.
I love that the teen’s subject matter is timely with what is happening in our society. I love that Nina is mindful and not giving in to her husband’s attitude and all that comes with it, good and bad. However, I did feel that the book was wrapped up rather neatly. While we also hear the POV of the victim in this mess, I don’t like how she was portrayed. Was she too naïve to figure out things out?
I do think this book could spark some polarizing discussion and it saddens me that that there are so many people that think like Nina’s husband and son. I doubt those people will read this book.
I give this book a solid 3.5 rating. Thank you to NetGalley for an Advanced Copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.

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This is Emily Giffin’s latest, to be released June 26, 2018. Emily Giffin has always been A MUST READ author to me.
Timely, provocative, and endlessly thought-provoking. Truly a beautiful novel.

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I have read several of Emily Giffin's novels over the years, but none as poignant as All We Ever Wanted. The characters were developed in a manner that made the reader feel as though they were someone you have come across in your own lifetime. Both those that you have liked and disliked from childhood all the way through to adulthood. In addition, the socioeconomic struggle that drives the novel is one that most people can relate to. All We Ever Wanted is a page-turning must read!

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I couldn't get into this--the writing style was so poor.

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Great story! Well written, easy to read, this book shows the difference between right and wrong and how we teach our kids to become better people. A caring and compassionate woman, trying to raise her son along with his father who is all about trying to make things go away with money and lies. I would highly recommend this book.

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