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Content snapshot
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Violence
Barely any
No significant violence
Language
Barely any
Mild language
Sexual Content
Some
Romantic relationships across various gender expressions; some physical intimacy
Substance Use
Barely any
A wakes up in a body that is dealing with drug addiction in one chapter; handled seriously
Emotional Intensity
Some
Philosophical questions about identity and what constitutes a 'self'; some emotional weight to the ending
What this book is about
A has never had a name or a body of their own. Every morning, A wakes up in a different person's body—a different life, a different family, a different city—and lives that day with care before moving on. A has always followed the rules. Then A meets Rhiannon and falls in love, and the rules stop mattering. Levithan's novel explores identity, love, and the question of what 'you' really are when stripped of everything except your consciousness. The concept is deployed with remarkable range—A inhabits bodies across gender, sexuality, race, and circumstances.
Notes for sensitive readers
Reader-flagged moments and themes that may affect your experience.
Questions of identity across gender and sexuality
One chapter involves a character in active addiction
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