115 pages • 3 hours read
David LevithanA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
A wakes up in Rhiannon’s body and can hardly believe it. At first, A thinks s/he’s dreaming, but A realizes soon that this is no dream. Every moment suddenly becomes precious. A worries, though, about Rhiannon’s privacy and wants to be extremely respectful of intruding on her life, taking more care than A has ever done for anyone else in the past. In trying to respect her privacy, A does not even take a shower, so A won’t have an unfair view of Rhiannon’s nakedness. Nonetheless, A can’t help but treasure every moment: “This is how it feels to raise her arm. This is how it feels to blink her eyes. This is how it feels to turn her head” (189).
At school, A is happy to meet Rhiannon’s other friends, but A is not so happy to see Justin. Justin, as usual, doesn’t give Rhiannon a chance to talk; he simply likes to hear himself speak. A struggles to stay in character and not use his/her power to have Rhiannon break up with him, as A knows this would end up dooming his/her relationship with Rhiannon. But when Justin calls Rhiannon “Silver,” A accesses a tender memory when Justin and Rhiannon were reading The Outsiders, and Justin was powerfully affected by it, especially by the line, “Nothing gold can stay” (194).
By David Levithan