Wednesday, 11 August 2021

Audio: If you, then me by Yvonne Woon


Narrated by: Katharine Chin


Length: 10 hrs and 7 mins


Release date: 07-06-21


Publisher: HarperAudio


YA fiction


To review





Audio: This was my first time listening to Katherine Chin. She was a great narrator who got the feel of things and I always knew who was who. Really good with a YA book.




This one reminded me a bit of When Dimple met Rishi. Fancy school, apps, and falling in love. Well the love part was hard coming here.




Xia is smart, loves coding,and had created this amazing AI. She gets into a 1 year program in Silicon Valley and off she goes.




And then it takes quite the turn. Teachers should really try harder. Xia in her new life totally forgets about the bottom line what she is doing. And no one seems to care. Like at the first night there there is this prank, and again, no one seems to care. Can 16 year olds even sign contracts!?




There is some romance too, she meets a guy, but her heart is already taken by the boy she met online, and she handles it really badly.




But, she is 16 and here I do feel that her age makes all her mistakes reasonable. She is young and want it all. And it all works out for her, which is totally weird. Cos she effs up majorly. With romance, school, friendship and everything.




It was an interesting story. Not the story I though I would get from the blurb. But a story if being swept away in something bigger than yourself, and having no one to reign you in.






Xia is stuck in a lonely, boring loop. Her only escapes are Wiser, an artificial intelligence app she designed to answer questions like her future self, and a mysterious online crush she knows only as ObjectPermanence. And then one day Xia enrolls at the Foundry, an app incubator for tech prodigies in Silicon Valley.

'



Suddenly, anything is possible. Flirting with Mast, a classmate also working on AI, leads to a date. Speaking up generates a vindictive nemesis intent on publicly humiliating her. And running into Mitzy Erst, Foundry alumna and Xia’s idol, could give Xia all the answers.




And then Xia receives a shocking message from ObjectPermanence: He is at the Foundry, too. Xia is torn between Mast and ObjectPermanence—just as Mitzy pushes her towards a shiny new future. Xia doesn’t have to ask Wiser to know: The right choice could transform her into the future self of her dreams, but the wrong one could destroy her.



15 comments:

  1. My biggest issue with this book was what you pointed out -- it wasn't what I was expecting. I appreciated the author's exploration of the dark side of the tech world, but it wasn't what I thought I would be reading.

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    1. I thought light, romance, and not this. It was good, but yes not what I was expecting

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  2. Sounds like a good book with a good narrator. Totally off topic... Kissing Booth 3 is out today!!!

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  3. Yeah, teenagers are going to make a lot of mistakes and when they do in books it makes it more believable.

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    1. She so needed someone to steer her right

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  4. Not sure I would have gone to this book but maybe

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  5. Sounds cute but doesn't sound really realistic. Oh well, at least the cover's awesome!

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  6. Sounds cute. I tend to be able to listen to these kinds of books and enjoy them more than if I read a physical copy.

    Also...I finished Never Have I Ever last week. Oh Devi lol


    Karen @For What It's Worth

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    1. Right! Omg Devi, I mean I even cried at one point cos it was so much.

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  7. Love the cover! Also a fan of heroines in STEM. :)

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  8. This sounds really good. And that cover should be a painting on a wall!

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