You get the drift.but for additional ideas, watch this YouTube video produced by a team at CSUN's Office of Student Involvement and Development: CSUN Freshmen Tips (FCR). "Will you be going to Freshman Convocation? I hear the author will be the keynote speaker." Or:.( )ĬSUN faculty and staff who would like a free copy of the book should email Cheryl Spector and include their campus address (with mail code), along with a promise that they will talk about the book, however briefly, with at least one new CSUN freshman in fall 2015. When I started writing Every Day, there were two questions I wanted to answer – first, what would it be like to be a person who grew up without gender, race, sexual orientation, parents, friends, and all of the other things we usually classify ourselves by, and, second, what would it be like to be in love with someone who changed every day – would it be possible? I wrote the book to figure out what my answers were. When A falls for Rhiannon, it suddenly changes the stakes of A’s story – and A’s life. Here's how Levithan describes the book:Īt the start of the story, A is sixteen, and wakes up in the body of Justin, who’s never really treated his girlfriend, Rhiannon, that well. The book is a work of fiction and tells the story of a character named A who awakens each morning in the body of a different person. Every Day is CSUN's Freshman Common Reading for 2015-2016.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |