Every day

Every day

2012 • 296 pages

Ratings126

Average rating3.6

15

There are some reasons this book deserves less than four stars, but there are more important details that give it that fourth star.

At the beginning of the book, you meet A, who inhabits a different body every day (you never figure out why). A is inhabiting the body of a boy named Justin. After being in his body, A falls in love with Justin's girlfriend, Rihannon. At first, it doesn't make sense, because it's breaking every rule A set for themself.

This epic love story progresses as the story goes on, but there's a seemingly useless event that won't matter until the end: one of the people A has inhabited remembers something. This conflict grows along with their romance.

And then one day, A inhabits Rihannon's body... I get that this was important to the plot, but it really didn't go the way it should have.

At the end, so much happens that I'm not okay with. Rihannon ends things with A, which they should have seen coming. But A refuses to leave it at that, and pairs her up with one of the bodies they inhabit. This made me mad because they once again broke every rule they've ever made for themself.

More on that breakup, Rihannon could have tried harder because A cant control anything. You know that even in the other books of the series, nothing will be the same.

This was a great book overall, but some things don't match up. I recommend this book, unless you're bit picky about details.

January 10, 2019