Ratings126
Average rating3.6
Actual rating 4.5 stars.
This book consumed me. I read in one sitting, totally engrossed in the condition of the human soul and its ability to love.
The spirit of A goes beyond gender and sexual identity and into a space of simply ‘being.' It was such an amazing perspective on existence. Juxatpose that with the love interest, Rhiannon's perception and interactions with A and her gradual understanding and acceptance of A, and their humanity, and you end up with a universal attitude of love and acceptance of everyone. It was truly inspired.
On the other hand, being A was weird. Always the interloper, unsure of your very existence. It's a hard place to be. Alone and transient. Enough to send you completely bonkers. But A finds a way to balance it all. A's own desires and wishes without impacting the lives of the bodies that are being borrowed for the day.
I loved toe tone of zero prejudice about the physical being and of identity. I loved getting to walk, if somewhat briefly, in so many other people's lives and feel that impact.
While we only get the tiniest hint of the mythology behind A and his existence, the rest of the novel feels like a social commentary on identity and how we treat each other. How we are all different, yet the same. I wanted to get involved more into the reasons why A was the way he was – a wandering soul. I was hoping that in the sequel ‘Another Day' I'd get more answers, but alas, only another brief touch on the mythology. I have my fingers crossed that we can really sink out teeth into the paranormal or science fiction of it all in the third book of the series ‘Someday' due out on the 2nd of October this year. Not long to wait now!
There's not much to say about this novel. It's a romance, a character study with a heavy dose of philosophy. I loved it. The concept so fresh in YA!
It's a beautiful quick read that I highly recommend.