Member Reviews

Awesome, amazing, fantastic! This book is all of that and more. Everywhere I turn, I’m seeing review after review for this book and usually, this kind of hype really turns me off. This one however just had a pull and I’m so pleased I picked it up.

So, if anyone out there is like me and has expectations that are usually too high regarding the popular books.
I’d say put your reservations aside and pick this one up. You won’t be disappointed!'

Thank you to the author, the publisher and Netgalley for my arc.
5 out of 5.

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I feel confident in saying that this book will be one of the best I read in 2022. There's still almost half of the year left but this novel, this incredible book, is well-worth every accolade it's received. I'm already going to recommend it to you and the rest of this review is my case for why.

I am astonished by this book. The depth and complexity of the characters is mind-blowing. They're more human that the majority I've read. They don't stick to some character development outline, their changes and logic for choices can be convoluted and strange but it works because that's how real people grow, not on some chart but with stops and starts. Sam, Sadie, Marx, and really the whole cast are more real life than fiction, reminding me of characterization in Fredrik Backman's books.

It's hard to pick a favorite but I adore Marx. He is the light that always pushes back against the darkness and he brings a beautiful, unshakeable belief in the goodness of the world to balance to Sam's dogged determination (downright compulsive at times) and Sadie's pessimistic practicality. The author does some interesting things with point-of-view, particularly with Marx's section in the middle (my favorite part) and the gameplay chapters.

As a gamer (but newer to it than most of my generation, which includes the protagonists) I really enjoyed the gaming references. That said, plenty of them went over my head and it didn't detract from my exerpeince at all. This book is only about making games on a surface level. The way they love games in this book is the way people love other things too, the things that get us moving when we don't want to. Anyone can relate to that along with the line "That's the gamer in you", that wish we all have sometimes to rewind the clock and try again for a better outcome.

To be honest, I felt bittersweet at the end of this book. It's so deeply sweet at times and so painfully bitter, it can be hard to separate the two to appreciate them both. It's the honesty of the book that hurts the most and there are a LOT of hard topics that get touched on: the shock of childhood trauma, chronic pain, family dynamics, motherhood/postpartum, depression, gun violence, partner abuse. I thought the page count was too long but it was absolutely perfect because there's SO much in this story.

Truly, it's a book I finished, looked at, and said aloud, "*That* was an incredible book." I received a free ebook copy for this review but I loved it so much I bought myself a print version. It's just the kind of book that is so intimate and special, you want to hold it close to you. I cannot recommend it highly enough.


Note: I received a free electronic edition of this book via NetGalley in exchange for the honest review above. I would like to thank them, the publisher, and the author for the opportunity to do so.

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This one was BEAUTIFUL. SO BEAUTIFUL.

I loved the writing, the relationship between Sam and Sadie and literally every piece in between. 4.5 stars!

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Normally I wouldn't have picked this up but I heard great things. Definitely out of my wheelhouse and kind of weird, but I really liked it. A beautiful story of love & friendship.

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Sam and Sadie met as teens under odd circumstances while Sam was in the hospital and Sadie was visiting her sister there. Their quick friendship ended due to a misunderstanding. Years later in college, they run into each other again, and before they know it, they’re working together to make their first video game. Spanning three decades and various settings, TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW, AND TOMORROW is a discussion on friendship, identity, failure, imposter syndrome, love. This is a love story like no other.

The short of it: I loved this book.

It took way too long for me to mesh with it but when I did, it was beautiful. I cried so much over the last 35% of the book.

At times, the writing was lyrical and gorgeous. Others, pretentious and unnecessary. This book has a lot of DNF-able parts in the beginning but they are so worth pushing through. The friendship discussion alone is beautiful. The gaming aspect was an interesting backdrop.

Sam and Sadie were characters I immediately fell for. Marx, Sam’s college roommate, is a fantastic third to add to the group. There are other characters that just add so much to this story — some good aspects, some bad aspects. This main three were especially real and felt like friends of my own.

I know it’s weird to highly recommend a book while also encouraging people to push through some parts, but I just feel that the overall story is lovely and captivating enough to do so.

“How I will miss the horses.”

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A lot of people seem to love this book. I found it jumped around a bit too much in timeline and perspective for my taste, and I had a hard time relating/connecting to Sadie. It seemed to drag a bit for me at times, although it picked up near the end.

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This book got a lot of hype prior to me reading it so I headed into it with high expectations. Overall, I say it did not meet them; however, it was still an enjoyable read and one I would recommend. This story follows the friendship of Sam and Sadie throughout several decades of their lives as they navigate life's challenges. It is definitely an ebb and flow about friendship and love and has many different layers to it all set in the late 80s and beyond with the backdrop of video games and the video game industry. It is not a light, fluff read but a multi-dimensioned, layered read that will leave you thinking about the characters and life after you finish it. You don't need to know anything about video games to like or dislike it; however, growing up in a similar timeframe, I enjoyed the backdrop of that. This is a story of life, the good and the bad, the people that you encounter and the impacts they have.

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Completely refreshing, completely addictive, completely beautiful! I love finding little gems like this… I wasn’t sure what to expect but I’m thoroughly glad I chose to read this!

Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for the ARC in exchange for a fair and honest review.

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Thank you, @netgalley, and @aaknopf, for the eARC and @librofm for audiobook, in return for an honest review.

“It’s tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow. It’s the possibility of infinite rebirth, infinite redemption. The idea that if you keep playing, you would win. No loss is permanent, because nothing is permanent ever.”

My Thoughts:
I listened to the audiobook majority of the time,. I did mention to a friend that I’m having a difficult time getting into the book. Maybe it’s the way how the narrator is reading, sounds monotonous and unemotional at times. Or maybe it’s the book. But I’m glad I finished the audiobook.

At the start, I was intrigued. I am not a gamer but I was familiar with a few games mentioned. Once they start developing the games, all the inner dialogue, squabbling, and miscommunication, I would lose interest. The only saving grace, as a friend puts it, is Marx. As much as I don’t like the relationship between Sadie and Sam, I hated the one with Dov.

By the time I got to Chapter VII and the rest of the book, I was hooked. It was heartbreaking and so beautifully done. I just want to reread that part.

Would I recommend the book? Yes. There are a lot of trigger warnings such as cancer, death, shooting, suicide, accident, S&M, misogyny, narcissism, and homophobic. It is also about friendship, forgiveness, love, and loyalty.

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I adored this! I know a little about video gaming but it wasn’t necessary to know anything at all going in. It was a beautiful story, a platonic love story. So fresh and needed!! Will be in my top books of the year!

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While Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow is a story about video games, it is more a story about friendship, love, and work. Sam and Sadie bond over video games as pre-teens. They become best friends and eventually come to know each other better than anyone else. Later, toward the end of college, they create a video game together that leads them to starting a video game production company. The story follows the major ups and downs of their relationship, all the way through their 30's.

While I have played video games, I am definitely not a gamer but this did not stop me from enjoying the book. I liked learning more about video games and some of what goes into making them.

Sam and Sadie are both well-developed characters. While I personally didn't connect with either one of them, they were both very well written. I honestly was a bit irritated with both of them at times throughout the story, but of course there would be no problems in most relationship-based books if characters just came out and said what they were feeling. I also liked the side characters. I loved Marx, and since he actually has a pretty big role in the story, I wished there was more written about and with him.

I did enjoy the book, but it felt quite long. There is nothing wrong with it per se, but there is nothing that really stood out to me and made me really like or love it. It is very well written, but also uses unnecessarily high-level vocabulary that disrupts the reading experience. That being said, I would still recommend this book to anyone who loves video games, is looking for a book with disability, racial, cultural, and LGBTQ rep, or who loves literary fiction.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the advance copy in exchange for my honest review.

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Sam and Sadie were childhood friends who bonded over illness and a love of games. After being estranged for several years, they meet again in college and decide to collaborate on a video game. With their friend Marx, they design and create several popular games. Over the course of two decades, they learn the meaning of friendship and love, and how to go on after an unspeakable loss.

Loved this - it's one of the best books I've read in 2022. I've read several of Zevin's book and I like her writing style. The main characters are young adults but it's not a YA novel. It's also about gaming, but you don't have to play games to enjoy it. I play games online (as do most of the adults I know) but the terms and abbreviations in the book are defined well enough for non-gamers to understand.

I highly recommend this title to anyone who enjoys contemporary fiction, well-developed characters, and a good storyline. Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an eARC.

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This was a book unlike any others I have read before. It's definitely a love story, but it's also a story of friendship, creativity, and working to your potential. All the characters were so well developed and I loved them all. The author deserves extra credit as I dislike video games very much, but she still made this a book I didn't want to put down.

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One of the best books of 2022! Powerful, poignant, insightful, and profound, this book is so much more than "just" a story about videogames and gamers. I'll be thinking about this book for a long, long time.

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This book was not one that I would have picked up. I am not a gamer and know nothing about gaming or technology. That being said I did enjoy the book. The story is intriguing with many layers, along with relationships, romance, college, careers, start ups, and businesses to run. Sam and Sadie’s characters are well defined. You feel like you really know them and understand how they react and why. The book, to me, dragged a bit and really slowed down to the point that I started to skim it. But it did pick up again. Thanks to Netgalley for an ARC.

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An absolute delight worthy of the hype. This story of Sadie and Sam's friendship is every bit as rich, complicated and heartwarming as any romance, if not more so. I've never read a story quite like it and can see it working for wide variety of readers, regardless of if they are into video games. I'll be recommending for a long time to come!!

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Phew wow! Such an intriguing story and a complicated relationship. I had seen this book all over and I'm so glad that I got to read it. Still thinking about it!

Thank you NetGalley and Gabrielle Zevin!

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This is my first book to read by this author but I cannot wait to read more by them! This is such a uniquely written story that you will find yourself thinking about long after you finish it. Highly recommend!!

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Thanks to NetGalley for providing a free copy of this ebook in exchange for an honest review.

“Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow” by Gabrielle Zevin is a wholly original novel about video gaming, work, creativity, relationships, growing up and life. The protagonists - game designers Sadie and Sam, whose meet cute happens in a hospital - and Sam’s college roommate, Marx, are sympathetic characters who adapt and grow throughout the book. The way the three interact and ultimately work together forms the scaffolding for the novel.

The title, of course, references Macbeth’s famous speech in Act 5, Scene 5 - if you didn’t have to memorize it for AP English, you can easily look it up. The text gives us a clue that the novel will also treat the subject of mortality, but it’s certainly not “Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.” It is a bit too long, though, which is the novel’s only fault.

I appreciated the various ways in which the author crafted the novel’s sections - some alternating perspective, some in the voice of the game itself, and more. It definitely kept me on my toes, and will keep me thinking for a long time. The novel is now available for purchase, and I switched back and forth between the ebook and the truly spectacular audiobook, available on Audible. I highly recommend both formats.

Five stars. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

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Thanks to NetGalley for a digital ARC in exchange for an honest review.
I loved this book. It was intriguing, multi-layered, well-written, and complex. I am not a big fan of videos games, nor do I know much about them, but I caught on to the Oregon Trail references and really liked them. All of the characters were developed very well, and I felt attached to them all, especially Sam’s grandparents. The story was very original, though it was a bit frustrating at times due to miscommunication.

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