



Where I End and You Begin
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
Ezra Slevin is an anxious, neurotic insomniac who spends his nights questioning his place in the universe and his days obsessing over Imogen, a nerdy girl with gigantic eyebrows and a heart of gold. For weeks, Ezra has been working up the courage to invite Imogen to prom. The only problem is Imogen's protective best friend, Wynonna Jones. Wynonna has blue hair, jams to '80s rock, and has made a career out of tormenting Ezra for as long as he can remember. Then, on the night of a total solar eclipse, something strange happens to Ezra and Wynonna--and they wake up in each other's bodies. Not only that, they begin randomly swapping back and forth every day! Ezra soon discovers Wynonna's huge crush on his best friend, Holden, a five-foot-nothing girl magnet with anger management problems. With no end to their curse in sight, Ezra makes Wynonna a proposition: while swapping bodies, he will help her win Holden's heart...but only if she helps him woo Imogen. Forming an uneasy alliance, Ezra and Wynonna embark on a collision course of mistaken identity, hurt feelings, embarassing bodily functions, and a positively byzantine production of Twelfth Night. Ezra wishes he could be more like Wynonna's badass version of Ezra--but he also realizes he feels more like himself while being Wynonna than he has in a long time... Wildly entertaining and deeply heartfelt, Where I End and You Begin is a brilliant, unapologetic exploration of what it means to be your best self.
Customer Reviews
This books might be my favorite
This book does a lot of swearing, description of naked bodies, though not in a sexual manner, mentions of sexual relations, and lots of heavy trauma.
I don’t know how to explain how much this book means to me. I first read it when I was a teen, and the story holds true to how kids feel. Ezra struggle with liking himself and figuring out who he is is sad, and the loss in Winona’s past is gut wrenching. I have read and re-read this book many times, and I always come back to it. I think the main thing I love about this book is the character building. Preston Norton goes the extra mile with making Ezra, Winona, Holden, Imogen, and Willow feel realistic in particular. I normally find protagonists to be the most boring character in a story, but Ezra is engaging, funny, and feels real enough for me to care about him. I would highly recommend this book, and I hope you enjoy it just as much as I do.10/10