With and Without You
#Wibbroka is back with another swoony YA--this time tackling long-distance relationships, in a novel based on their own romantic history.

If high school seniors Siena and Patrick were a superlative, they'd be Couple Most Likely to Marry. Three solid years of dating, and everyone agrees they're perfect for each other. But with college on the horizon, Siena begins to wonder whether staying together is the best idea. Does she really want to be tied down during the most transformative years of her life? So she makes a decision to break up with Patrick, convincing herself it's for the best. Though, before she can get the words out, he beats her to the punch: his family is moving. He'll be spending senior year in Austin. A thousand miles away. Caught off guard by the news, Siena agrees to stay with Patrick, believing their relationship will naturally fizzle out with time and distance. But over a series of visits throughout the school year, Siena begins to see a different side of Patrick--one that has her falling in love with him all over again.
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With and Without You
#Wibbroka is back with another swoony YA--this time tackling long-distance relationships, in a novel based on their own romantic history.

If high school seniors Siena and Patrick were a superlative, they'd be Couple Most Likely to Marry. Three solid years of dating, and everyone agrees they're perfect for each other. But with college on the horizon, Siena begins to wonder whether staying together is the best idea. Does she really want to be tied down during the most transformative years of her life? So she makes a decision to break up with Patrick, convincing herself it's for the best. Though, before she can get the words out, he beats her to the punch: his family is moving. He'll be spending senior year in Austin. A thousand miles away. Caught off guard by the news, Siena agrees to stay with Patrick, believing their relationship will naturally fizzle out with time and distance. But over a series of visits throughout the school year, Siena begins to see a different side of Patrick--one that has her falling in love with him all over again.
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With and Without You

With and Without You

by Emily Wibberley, Austin Siegemund-Broka

Narrated by Taylor Meskimen

Unabridged — 10 hours, 37 minutes

With and Without You

With and Without You

by Emily Wibberley, Austin Siegemund-Broka

Narrated by Taylor Meskimen

Unabridged — 10 hours, 37 minutes

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Overview

#Wibbroka is back with another swoony YA--this time tackling long-distance relationships, in a novel based on their own romantic history.

If high school seniors Siena and Patrick were a superlative, they'd be Couple Most Likely to Marry. Three solid years of dating, and everyone agrees they're perfect for each other. But with college on the horizon, Siena begins to wonder whether staying together is the best idea. Does she really want to be tied down during the most transformative years of her life? So she makes a decision to break up with Patrick, convincing herself it's for the best. Though, before she can get the words out, he beats her to the punch: his family is moving. He'll be spending senior year in Austin. A thousand miles away. Caught off guard by the news, Siena agrees to stay with Patrick, believing their relationship will naturally fizzle out with time and distance. But over a series of visits throughout the school year, Siena begins to see a different side of Patrick--one that has her falling in love with him all over again.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

06/20/2022

In Siegemund-Broka and Wibberley’s (What’s Not to Love) latest swoony collaboration, high school sweethearts on the brink of change embark on a long-distance relationship. Siena and Patrick, both cued as white, have been dating for the past three years, and everyone insists that they are made for each other. With college looming, however, Siena worries that spending the rest of their lives having only ever dated one person is holding them back from their futures, and she resolves to break up with Patrick. But when Patrick’s family abruptly leaves Arizona for Texas, Siena, assuming their relationship will naturally fizzle when faced with time and separation, decides they’ll give long-distance a shot. Together, through misunderstandings and an unpredictable transition into adulthood, they must determine whether their future has room for the people they’ve been together and the people they want to become. Supporting characters often act solely as sounding boards for the protagonists’ relationship, and the novel’s episodic narrative, told from Siena’s occasionally meandering perspective, can feel disjointed. Nevertheless, Siena and Patrick’s relationship dynamic feels live-in, their banter is engaging, and their growth is effortlessly romantic, making for a tender, cozy read. Ages 14–up. Agent: Katie Shea Boutillier, Donald Maass Literary. (Apr.)

School Library Journal

04/01/2022

Gr 9 Up—This book tackles the tumultuous struggles that come with a long distance relationship. High school seniors Siena and Patrick are romance goals, and considered the one couple that will probably be together forever. For Siena, this begins to mess with her mind, and with college and other goals after high school looming, she considers breaking up with Patrick. Yet when Patrick announces that his family is moving out of state for his senior year, Siena decides to give a long distance relationship a shot instead. What follows is a gorgeous story, where Siena tries her hardest to believe that maybe this long distance thing is honestly not worth the trouble; still, every time she visits Patrick or they reconnect, she seems to love him even more. This novel, while extremely romantic, also explores the strength that comes with trying to keep a relationship alive despite distance, especially when there's a true connection. VERDICT Filled with moments that will make readers' hearts swell, and relatable emotional struggles, this is a perfect story for those who believe that young love can be true love.—Aurora Dominguez

Kirkus Reviews

2022-01-11
Siena and Patrick have been together so long their friends regard them as a single unit.

As they head toward senior year, Siena feels trapped and decides to break up with Patrick during their weekly coffee date. But Patrick has his own shocking development to reveal: His family is moving from Phoenix to Austin. Thrown off guard, Siena takes Patrick up on his offer to try the long-distance thing, presuming the relationship will fizzle out and she won’t have to be the heartbreaker after all. As the school year unfolds, the two exchange texts, schedule holiday visits, and create new social circles. The relationship Siena once saw as stale expands as well, giving her a lot to ponder as college looms. Told from Siena’s point of view, the novel takes a while to really start humming. Siena’s complaints about the perfectly decent Patrick grow tiresome; readers may check out before the worm turns and the authors start flipping new cards. Once things get going, the novel becomes a reasonably well-sketched rendering of young love evolving, but there’s a lot of padding to get through first. The pacing and character shading are the novel’s weakest points: Patrick never really pops as a real person, and Siena, desperate to figure out her new identity, comes off as whiny. She ultimately settles on a new pursuit that feels like it comes out of the blue rather than organically emerging from her personality. Siena and Patrick are presumed White.

A well-intentioned misfire. (Romance. 14-18)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940175452465
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 04/19/2022
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

One

“I want to break up.”

The words feel weird passing my lips. I can’t quite believe them even though I’m the one saying them. Maybe there’s just no way to prepare for the end of stories like ours.

The whole thing is made weirder by the fact I’m f  loating in a swimming pool, sheltering from the hundred—degree Phoenix sun. On days like this, I never know where the droplets of chlorinated water on my shoulders end and where my sweat starts. Right now, though, I’m pretty sure I’m mostly sweat. Not just from the heat, either.

“Patrick,” I continue before I lose my courage. I have a whole speech planned out, and I’m determined to give it. “You know how much you mean to me,” I go on, working hard to keep my expression contrite yet respectful. “You’ve honestly been the best boyfriend—-”

From across the pool, he interrupts me. “And you’ve been the best girlfriend.” He’s treading water in the deep end, sweat beading on the brown skin of his brow.

I grimace. “Thanks,” I say through my teeth. It’s the worst kind of thank you. Not grateful, just necessary. “But what I’m trying to say is that we’ve been together for nearly three years. I’m just wondering if . . . maybe we’re too young for this kind of commitment.” I hear my voice grow stronger by the end of the sentence, which is good. It’s the only thing making this bearable, really. I believe what I’m saying.

“Siena, you’re my world,” he protests. “You’re my everything. You have been since we were fifteen.”

My mouth f  lattens. Some stinging combination of sunscreen and water has slipped into my eye, and I rub it, grateful for the moment to regroup. “That’s my point, though. It’s been almost three years.” There’s more I don’t say. We haven’t even saidI love you. We haven’t had sex. We discussed early in our relationship wanting to wait for the “right time.” Which . . . somewhere in these three years, shouldn’t I have felt like it was the right time? “Do you want to graduate high school having only dated me?” I ask.

His reply is immediate. “Yes! I literally only want to date you!” He looks genuinely confused by my question. Then his expression clouds over. “Wait, who else do you want to date?”

I’ve been bobbing lightly on my toes in the pool, but when I sink down, I realize I’ve drifted into the five—foot section. I’m only five foot six, and I find the water rising past my mouth. I’ve lost my footing, conversationally and literally.

Paddling into shallower water, I force myself to remain clear and calm. “Nobody in particular,” I say. “I just feel like I need freedom. Not to date exactly, but to explore who I am.”

I breathe out. That’s it. That’s what I’ve been feeling this summer, in the months leading up to Patrick’s and my senior year. The truth is, if I examine who I am right now, I’m not very interested in what I find. I’m incredibly, painfullynormal. I just exist, filling days with the routines of life. I go to school. I do Model UN. I’m not very good—-I never gavel. Besides, I joined the extracurricular for Patrick. On Saturday nights, I go to the movies or McDonald’s with the same group of friends I’ve had since elementary school.

Honestly, my most defining feature is my boyfriend. Patrick and I are The Couple. The couple our circle of classmates can only imagine as a unit. No one even says our names separately. It’s onlySienaandPatrick. PatrickandSiena. SienaandPatrick are in our prom limo.PatrickandSiena were the only people not drinking. Which isn’t Patrick’s fault, not in the least. But itis our relationship’s fault. When everything I do involves or centers on him, it’s hard to figure out how to be my own person. I just know I can’t stand it much longer—-I’m desperate for something to change.

His voice cuts harshly into my thoughts, louder now. “So, what? We’re over? Three years, and you’re throwing me away?”

I’m caught off guard. I f  latten my feet on the rough concrete of the pool for some sense of stability. “It’s really more like two and a half years,” I point out, then wince.

“Like I’m garbage?” he goes on emphatically.

“Patrick, you’re—-you’re not garbage.” I kick under the water to move closer, reaching out for him.

He pushes away from me, splashing dramatically. “You were everything to me,” he says. “I guess I was nothing to you. I don’t even know who you are anymore. The Siena I knew would never do this to me,” he wails.

I open my mouth to reply, then—-

Instead, I sigh. Dropping the contrition from my expression, I frown. “Okay, this isn’t helpful,” I inform him.

He stops f  lailing immediately, mirroring the change in me. “Too much?” he asks apologetically, his expression completely changed.

“Way too much,” I confirm. “You have to be realistic, Joe. Patrick won’t make a scene.”

My best friend nods, considering my feedback like an actor hoping this performance wins him his Emmy. “He will be heartbroken, though,” Joe says matter—of—factly.

Ruefully, I realize he’s not wrong. While Joe obviously doesn’t know Patrick quite as well as I do, he’s received more secondhand knowledge of Patrick Reynolds than anyone on the planet. I made a point of having the three of us hang out often so that Patrick never got jealous of Joe and Joe didn’t feel like I ditched him when I got a boyfriend.

Joe’s my closest friend and has been since we were five years old. We met in kindergarten, our friendship founded on having the same Wonder Woman lunch box. These days, Joe is much cooler than me. I can’t explain why we’re friends except to say we just get along. On paper, we don’t have much in common—-Joe is Black and wealthy, plays drums in the jazz band, and hangs out with athletes and drama kids instead of my friends in Model UN—or MUN for short, as in, rhymes with fun. But it doesn’t matter.

It’s why I’m here. When I decided today was finally the day I would break up with Patrick, I texted Joe, who promptly invited me over.

I didn’t hesitate. First, Joe’s house has a sweet pool, and it’s ridiculously hot out. Second, I needed to get out of my apartment before my brother, Robbie, started making out with his new girlfriend on the couch. Most importantly, however, I wanted to rehearse my speech.

Joe agreed, probably out of boredom, when I explained I needed him to play the role of Patrick. We’ve spent the past final weeks of summer supposedly enjoying the homework—less emptiness of each day, but really doing nothing. I know Joe has more parties, more obligations, more unread group chats on his phone than Patrick and I do. Even for him, though, I think summer has started to feel a little listless.

Hence him getting carried away with the role of Patrick, my soon—to—be ex—boyfriend.

“Patrick’s too nice to get argumentative,” I point out. “Honestly, he’ll probably end up consolingme after I dump him.” The thought douses me in guilt. Despite the heat, the water feels cold and clammy on my submerged skin. I don’twant to hurt Patrick, partly because he really is that nice.

Joe ducks his head under. Coming quickly back up, he blinks water out of his eyes. “Well, you know he’s going to be crushed, even if he doesn’t show it.”

“Are you trying to make me feel worse?” I’m going for joking and end up sounding miserable.

“No,” he replies gently. “Just—-are you sure about this?”

I weigh the question seriously as if I haven’t asked myself the same thing every night for weeks, staring at the small photo of Patrick and me from a Model UN conference in the craft—store frame next to my pillow. It’s not that I don’t love Patrick. I’m just not in love with him.

Deep down, I know it’s not just lack of passion driving my decision, either. I’m scared of staying the same girl I was when I was fifteen, when I started dating Patrick. I feel stilted, confining myself to fit my relationship, to stay the person who fell for Patrick three years ago.

The thing is, I know it doesn’t have to be this way. I’ve been friends with Joe longer than I’ve been dating Patrick. But my friendship with Joe hasn’t kept either of us from changing over the past eleven years. Joe, with his enormous video game collection, his skateboarding scabs. I never felt trapped into being that kindergartener with her Wonder Woman lunch box in order to stay friends with him.

Yet with Patrick, I’m stuck. Our relationship is routinized. We have every excuse to do the same things, have the same conversations, see the same people. It’s why I really haven’t changed since we started dating. I’m afraid if I stay with him, comfortable in our complacency, I’ll be forever the fifteen—year—old who watches YouTube home renovations late into the night, does puzzles for fun, goes to the same café every Saturday afternoon. The girl Patrick loves.

Everyone else gets to change. I look at my friends, look at Joe’s older sister, Hailey, who’s home from her freshman year at Rice. She’s vegan now. She listens to music she calls chillwave and deep house. She’s training to run a marathon. It’s like she discovered this whole other person within herself.

I don’t want to run a marathon. I did not enjoy the chillwave she played for me. But I do want to discover new sides of myself.

“Yes,” I say honestly to Joe. “I’m sure. Breaking up won’t be easy, but it’s the right thing to do.”

“Then you don’t need to practice,” Joe replies. “Just be honest with him.”

I smile weakly. I hate this, even though I know it’s right. Patrick is the kindest boy I’ve ever met. He’s probably the kindestperson I’ve ever met. Breaking up will hurt us both. But that’s no reason to put it off.

I hoist myself out of the pool, immediately feeling the oven—like heat. The pavement sears my feet, and I spring lightly for my sandals. Wrapping my towel around my shoulders, I turn back to the pool.

“By the way,” I call to Joe, “you’re my world?”

Hearing his words repeated, Joe waves a hand carelessly. “I don’t know what Patrick says to you in your intimate moments.”

I laugh despite myself. “Well, it’s not you’re my world.” I pull on my dress over my wet bathing suit, knowing the fabric will dry in minutes. Glimpsing my ref  lection in Joe’s glass sliding doors, I notice the damp boob stains outlined on mydress, my hair—dark brown, usually straight—-hangingtangled and stringy down my back. “Should I shower and change before I meet up with him?” I ask Joe.

Joe climbs up onto one of the rafts f  loating in the crystal water. “You’re about to dump the man and you’re worried about how you look?”

I wind my hair into a bun using the hairband I keep on my wrist. It looks a little better. “I just want him to know I respect him,” I say.

Joe closes his eyes, stretching out on the raft. “Siena, don’t procrastinate,” he says. “Go put him out of his misery.”

I cross the hot concrete to the glass doors. “Okay, I’m going,” I grumble. “The next time you see me, I’ll be single.”

It’s unexpectedly reassuring to say. I’ll be single. Once I get through this conversation, I won’t be Patrick Reynolds’s girlfriend. I’ll be someone else—-me, or the beginning of who I might become.

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