For as long as A can remember, life has meant waking up in a different person’s body every day, forced to live as that person until the day ended. A always thought there wasn’t anyone else who had a life like this.
But A was wrong. There are others.
A has already been wrestling with powerful feelings of love and loneliness. Now comes an understanding of the extremes that love and loneliness can lead to—and what it’s like to discover that you are not alone in the world.
In Someday, David Levithan takes readers further into the lives of A, Rhiannon, Nathan, and the person they may think they know as Reverend Poole, exploring more deeply the questions at the core of Every Day and Another Day: What is a soul? And what makes us human?
Representation:
The gender, sexual, and romantic identities are hard to label, since A switches bodies every day. The closest terms are A as an agender person who is attracted to girls, and Rhiannon is a cis girl who is pansexual.
Race/Ethnicity:
Since A switches bodies every day, multiple races and ethnicities are represented.