![]() ![]() ![]() Verdict: Audio could provide accessibility for reluctant readers, but more fluent audiences will likely prefer the page. X is especially jarring, for example, presented (more accurately) as a growling manipulator by Damron, becoming unrecognizably scratchy-voiced in McKenna’s interpretation of X in A’s chapters. David Levithan (Goodreads Author), Billy Merrell. The Full Spectrum: A New Generation of Writing About Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, Question. Despite the potential enhancements of a vast cast, careless direction mars the production when same characters are inconsistently read by different readers, resulting in unintentional multiple personalities. 1 of 5 stars 2 of 5 stars 3 of 5 stars 4 of 5 stars 5 of 5 stars. The recording also includes Mark Bramhall, Tara Sands, Will Roth, Fred Sanders, Lorna Raver, Coleen Marlo, Vikas Adam, Tim Heller, who are each distinctly named at the opening. Performed by a dozen readers, Someday features Alex McKenna of Every Day (2012) as A, Kathleen McInerney of Another Day (2015) reprising Rhiannon, with Will Damron as X, and Robbie Daymond as Nathan. ![]() In the series’ third installment, reunion inevitably looms. Rhiannon and Nathan know these souls intimately: Rhiannon can’t let A go Nathan barely escaped X’s control. A and X are two such wanderers, albeit with diverging agendas: A’s a respectful temporary visitor, X a parasitic usurper. Constant corporeal manifestations aren’t mandatory for certain souls in David Levithan’s Every Day series: waking up in someone else’s body is ‘normal’ for some. ![]()
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