
Every day
Panoramica di Every day
Every Day follows a soul who wakes in a different body daily. This New York Times bestseller sparked conversations about identity beyond physical appearance, earning multiple awards including the 2013 YALSA Teens' Top Ten. What if love truly transcends the body we inhabit?
Temi chiave in Every day
- disembodied consciousness
- transient identity
- love beyond appearance
- ethical body swapping
- radical empathy
Citazioni da Every day
I try not to interfere. For the most part, I merely occupy.
I'm not defined by my body. I've never been defined by my body.
Personaggi di Every day
- AA consciousness that inhabits a new body each day
- RhiannonA teenage girl who A falls in love with
- JustinA self-centered teenager whose body A inhabits
Sull'autore
Sull'autore di Every day
David Levithan is the acclaimed author of Every Day and a pioneering voice in young adult LGBTQ literature. Born in 1972 in Short Hills, New Jersey, Levithan serves as Editorial Director at Scholastic.
He also founded the PUSH imprint dedicated to discovering diverse voices in YA fiction. Every Day, a groundbreaking science fiction romance about a consciousness that wakes up in a different body each day, explores themes of identity, love, and acceptance central to his work.
His celebrated novels include Boy Meets Boy, which won the Lambda Literary Award, and collaborations like Will Grayson, Will Grayson with John Green and Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist with Rachel Cohn. In 2016, Levithan received the Margaret A. Edwards Award for his lasting contribution to young adult literature. Every Day was adapted into a major motion picture in 2018 and won the YALSA Teens' Top Ten award.
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FAQ su questo libro
Every Day by David Levithan follows A, a being who wakes up in a different body every single day, never spending more than 24 hours in the same life. The story transforms when A falls in love with Rhiannon, forcing them to navigate an impossible romance while confronting what it means to love someone when your own body, gender, and identity change daily.
Every Day is ideal for young adult readers interested in thought-provoking contemporary fiction that challenges conventional ideas about identity, love, and what defines us. Fans of LGBTQ+ literature, philosophical coming-of-age stories, and readers who enjoy books exploring empathy and human connection will find this novel particularly compelling.
Every Day is worth reading for its unique premise and emotional depth. David Levithan's New York Times bestselling novel offers a fresh perspective on identity politics and unconditional love by stripping away the physical constants that typically define us. The book raises profound questions about whether love transcends physical form while remaining accessible and engaging.
David Levithan is a New York Times bestselling author and Editorial Director at Scholastic who has written over 30 YA books featuring LGBTQ+ characters. His notable works include:
- Boy Meets Boy
- Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist with Rachel Cohn
- Will Grayson, Will Grayson with John Green
- Two Boys Kissing, which won the Lambda Literary Award
The central concept of Every Day explores what life would be like if you weren't defined by body, gender, or race. A exists without a fixed physical form, experiencing life through different people each day, which allows David Levithan to examine how much of our identity comes from our bodies versus our consciousness and choices.
Every Day dismantles traditional identity markers by presenting a protagonist who experiences life across different genders, races, and body types. A's daily transformations force readers to question what makes someone "themselves" when physical appearance constantly changes. This approach lets David Levithan explore whether our core self exists independent of our physical form and societal labels.
A discovers that genuine love challenges everything they've learned about survival and non-attachment. By falling for Rhiannon, A must confront whether authentic connection is possible when you can never maintain the same physical presence. The novel examines if love can exist purely as an emotional and intellectual bond when physical consistency is impossible.
Every Day explores identity fluidity, unconditional love, empathy, and what defines humanity. The novel tackles gender identity, body image, privilege across different bodies, and the nature of consciousness. David Levithan uses A's daily transformations to examine how we judge others based on appearance and how experiencing different lives can build profound empathy and understanding.
Another Day is David Levithan's companion novel to Every Day that retells the same story from Rhiannon's perspective. While Every Day follows A's experiences waking up in different bodies, Another Day reveals how Rhiannon processes this impossible relationship, providing readers with the other side of their love story and exploring how it feels to love someone who's never the same person twice.
Critics sometimes question the book's exploration of consent, as A inhabits bodies without the hosts' permission and pursues Rhiannon using borrowed identities. Some readers find the premise more theoretical than emotionally grounded, while others debate whether the novel fully addresses the ethical implications of A's existence and the invasion of privacy inherent in body-hopping without consent.
Every Day features David Levithan's signature exploration of LGBTQ+ themes and identity but with a more fantastical premise than his realistic novels like Boy Meets Boy or Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist. Unlike his groundbreaking debut which presented an idealized queer world, Every Day uses speculative fiction to examine universal questions about love and identity that transcend traditional categorizations.
Every Day remains highly relevant as conversations about gender fluidity, non-binary identity, and the social construction of self have become increasingly mainstream. The novel's exploration of how we define ourselves beyond physical bodies resonates strongly in an era of digital identity, avatar culture, and evolving understanding of gender and identity as spectrums rather than fixed categories.

















