I Always Think Its Forever, Timothy Goodman
I Always Think Its Forever, Timothy Goodman
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I Always Think It's Forever
A Love Story Set in Paris as Told by an Unreliable but Earnest Narrator

Author: Timothy Goodman

Narrator: Timothy Goodman

Unabridged: 1 hr 56 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/31/2023


Synopsis

A sweeping, unique memoir about an artist’s year abroad in Paris and how it gave way to an all-encompassing love affair and crushing heartbreak as he wrestled with trauma, masculinity, and the real possibility of hope.

Renowned graphic artist Timothy Goodman planned to do what every young artist dreams of and spend a year abroad in Paris. While there, he fell in love in a way he never had before. For the first time in his life, he let himself be loved and finally, truly loved someone else. But the deeper the love, the more crushing the heartbreak when the relationship eventually fell apart, forcing him to look inwards. He confronted traumas of his past as well as his own toxic masculinity, and he learned to finally show up for himself.

I Always Think It’s Forever is a one-of-a-kind memoir that chronicles it all—the ups, the downs, love lost, and love found—all in the bold style Goodman is best known for, with poetic prose and a touch of humor added as well. It’s a glimpse inside the heart and mind of a man, first focusing on the time Goodman spent in Paris, including diary entries relating his experiences learning about French food, culture, and language. This touching memoir also explores the painful break-up just six months later in Rome. Goodman artfully describes his attempts at learning to love himself in the end, his scars, cuts, warts, and all in a way no book ever has before.

About Timothy Goodman

Timothy Goodman is an award-winning artist, graphic designer, author, and public speaker. His art and words have populated walls, buildings, packaging, shoes, clothing, books, magazine covers, and galleries all over the world for brands such as Apple, Nike, Google, MoMA, Netflix, Tiffany & Co., Samsung, Yves Saint Laurent, Sundance, Uniqlo, Target, The New Yorker, and The New York Times. He regularly partners with not-for-profit organizations and schools to create art for communities in New York. He’s the author of Sharpie Art Workshop and the cocreator of several projects including the viral blog and book 40 Days of Dating. His first solo gallery exhibition, I’m Too Young to Not Set My Life on Fire, was on view in Manhattan in 2021. Timothy’s work often discusses mental health, therapy, manhood, race, politics, heartbreak, and love. He teaches at School of Visual Arts, regularly speaks around the world at creative conferences, and enjoys sharing his life on Instagram. He lives in New York City.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Roxane on February 21, 2023

Interviewing the author at B & N. Paris is my favorite city so I enjoyed reading about a man taking some time away to live in Paris. Baguette 4eva.......more

Goodreads review by Vovka on December 19, 2024

Illustration: 5 stars. Actual words: 2 stars. Cliche, trite, full of narcissistic wallowing.......more

Goodreads review by Juj on February 22, 2023

thank you to simon & schuster for sending me a copy of i always think it’s forever! i really love and connected to this art style and found the mix of text, illustrations, and “written” sections compelling and just the right amount of whimsical. i didn’t super connect with this story or its themes,......more

Goodreads review by Izzy on March 28, 2023

While this book was a great cozy read, I’m not sure I would consider it a graphic novel simply because the story was entirely told through words and most of the images provided seemed like Keith-Haring styled graphic designs meant for merch. I also felt like the author thought he was being profound......more

Goodreads review by Jennifer on November 05, 2023

Recommended: eh If you're able to read slowly through, if you love poetry, if you're good at tongue twisters This has a lyrical, almost poetic flow to the prose. It honestly made it really hard to read for any longer than 5-10 minutes at a time because it was like doing mental gymnastics or reading a......more