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The Nobodies

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Sometimes I wondered if I imagined it, said Nina. But deep down I knew I didn't.

Jess said, We did too much damage for it not to be real.

Jess and Nina, Nina and Jess ... to everyone else they're typical best friends, sharing closeness and confidences in their own little world. But Nina and Jess have a secret. Simply by touching their foreheads together, they can swap bodies.

In Jess's assertive persona, self-conscious Nina turns bolder, free to say what she's frightened to voice on her own. Inhabiting Nina, Jess becomes part of the loving, stable family she craves.

Now, in crisis after her father's death, Jess has reentered Nina's life following a long separation. Once again they switch bodies, and their worlds begin to mesh. Each deceives the other, confesses, is forgiven. But how deeply can you sink into another's life before there's nothing left of you? Set against the vibrant backdrop of New York City, The Nobodies poses questions about the nature of intimacy, the many flavors of betrayal, and the value of female friendships.

264 pages, Hardcover

First published June 21, 2022

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Alanna Schubach

2 books22 followers

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5 stars
44 (34%)
4 stars
33 (25%)
3 stars
35 (27%)
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16 (12%)
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Displaying 1 - 28 of 28 reviews
Profile Image for Matt..
214 reviews1 follower
March 12, 2022
A fascinating, sad, and completely realistic tale about two friends who can't help but love and harm each other. A stunning, heartbreaking, and ultimately hopeful novel. Do yourself a favor and purchase this book when it comes out on June 21st. Thank you to NetGalley and Blackstone Publishing for this advanced copy.
Profile Image for Alicia Reviews.
430 reviews41 followers
May 28, 2022
The Nobodies


Alanna Schubach

“You were told, when you were young, that the possibilities were endless. Only with Jess had that ever seemed true.”

This was an excellent book. It was so much more than just a tale about two friends who can body swap. It was about friendship, connections, loss, betrayal and love. Jess and Nina are two completely realistic characters, trying to make it through life. Throw in the body swapping and it makes for a book that will leave a mark.

Thank you NetGalley and Black stone publishing for the ARC.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Profile Image for Jordyn Roesler | Sorry, Booked Solid.
725 reviews214 followers
July 17, 2022
Such an interesting premise but such a let down of a book 😭 it just felt sooo mundane for me. I was way more interested in the past timeline than the present and was hoping for more twists and turns and creative use of the sci fi element. I think there’s an audience who would enjoy this slow, melancholy, character-study book, but it’s unfortunately not me!
Profile Image for Geonn Cannon.
Author 105 books188 followers
July 21, 2022
I really hate when authors decide to alternate chapters between past and present. It's the same people, who know each other's history, and the present-day chapters have them being vague and circumspect entirely for the reader's sake. This time I refused to play along and just skipped chapters to read it chronologically. It was a weird experiment, because all the "past" chapters were good, well-written, flowed together well (so well that sometimes I found it hard to believe there were entire sections between them). The "future" chapters were just... odd and disjointed and comparatively uninteresting. It felt like the plot was being rushed through and, again, I couldn't imagine getting snippets of their history in between each segment of their adult selves.

So the experiment to read the book chronologically technically failed. But honestly, I think I would have liked the book even less if I'd been forced to jump back and forth in time every chapter.
Profile Image for Seth Sawyers.
110 reviews4 followers
January 12, 2022
A thrilling, melancholy, absolutely real-feeling novel about two friends who can't help but love each other and hurt each other. A beautiful, devastating, and ultimately hopeful book.
Profile Image for Helly.
5 reviews2 followers
March 7, 2022
A fantastic novel about female friendships. Think Neapolitan Novels meets Freaky Friday, but much more than that.
Profile Image for Stacy40pages.
1,570 reviews191 followers
March 3, 2022
The Nobodies by Alanna Schubach. Thanks to @blackstonepublishing for the gifted Arc ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Jess and Nina become best friends immediately when meeting as children. They soon discover they have the capability to switch bodies with the touch of their foreheads. After a dramatic blow-up, they part ways only to come back together and swap again as adults.

One thing I really liked about this book was that it was true to life, except for the whole body swapping thing of course. Their time as kids and teenagers was so realistic, especially their relationship with each other. I remember close childhood friendships and how there was always a strand of envy. I found myself much more invested in their past than the current timeline, which does happen to me often. I was still curious enough to stick with it.

“It was weird, and right, to be side by side again as though five years hadn’t happened; as though she hasn’t had to learn, wobbling like a newborn animal, to stand on her own. Exiled for so long to ordinariness that she’d begun to believe it was better.”

The Nobodies comes out 6/21.
Profile Image for Mary.
376 reviews15 followers
June 12, 2022
This premise—best friends who can swap bodies—could have gone a number of directions. It could have had a genre feel—sci-fi, horror even. It could have been Freaky Friday-esque YA. But it’s not any of those things, and while I probably also would have enjoyed it as sci-fi or horror, the deeply psychological and literary novel it ended up being is more complex and nuanced than what I expected.

I’m sure I’m not the first to make this comparison and won’t be the last, but the book reminds me of Elena Ferrante more than anything. It’s a moving portrayal of female friendship, but dark and without sentiment.

I only just put it down, and am still of two (or three) minds about the ending, but that’s sort of fitting. Schubach has taken what could have been a gimmick and teased out its most uncomfortable parts. So it seems appropriate that I’ll probably be turning the ending over in my head for awhile and deciding what taste it’s left in my mouth.
Profile Image for Anna Joy.
24 reviews1 follower
September 18, 2022
This was a mesmerizing read from start to end, and I found myself left with a feeling after finishing it that was not at all what I thought I would end up with. It was moving in a way I didn't quite expect, and though the premise was surreal—two friends who can body-swap—it detailed friendship in a way that was all too real; sometimes friendships simply feel that deep, to the point where lives become intertwined.
Schubach writes beautifully; the prose was eloquent, and the structure of alternating chapters was incredibly well done.
I have a feeling this one is going to sit with me for a while, but I can immediately tell this is a favorite: highly recommend.
ARC Provided by the Publisher. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Matthew Taub.
Author 5 books5 followers
August 30, 2022
Engrossing story of a childhood female friendship safeguarding a shared supernatural power. Lurid details portray settings from New York to Japan, from adolescent angst to meandering adulthood. Fascinating philosophical questions are presented by the tension of Nina and Jess, lifelong friends with a special bond. Who are we, really, if we aren’t always ourselves? And how much of our outlook and disposition is the result of our appearance, and the way others treat us? Finally, what happens when a power that can bring two people closer is used to deceive others, ultimately pushing them away? A slow buildup of tension, criss-crossing decades, ends with a profound culmination.
Profile Image for Jody Blanchette.
792 reviews56 followers
July 27, 2022
The Nobodies is a book about friendship. Friendships can be deeper and more emotional then a lover. Some friendships can be soulmates. The women in this book have that kind of friendship. They have no boundaries.
Nina and Jess can swap bodies by touching foreheads. They have the chance to live in someone else’s shoes, see what it’s like in someone else’s skin. Sometimes it’s wonderful, sometimes it’s horrible. But what happens when you are happy within your own life, and you no longer want to share it? This is what forms the crack in their relationship. Swapping bodies doesn’t mean they can decide how the other lives, or make choices for them that can change everything.
A strange yet beautiful book, The Nobodies is a fresh take on astral projection and real friendship. It’s almost a Sci Fi thriller, but maybe woman’s fiction too. I felt a ton of emotions, loved and hated the characters, and couldn’t put the book down. I know I’ll be thinking about it for a long time.
Profile Image for Juneyo.
1 review
June 23, 2022
Conceptually rich exploration of an intense friendship. The body-switching conceit is beautifully handled. I found the book unsettling, exciting, poignant, wise. It moves quickly but leaves plenty of time for one's thoughts to expand. An absorbing read.
Profile Image for Dan Zak.
Author 2 books17 followers
July 21, 2022
Unpredictable, unconventional. Funny, sad. Crisp writing that evokes instead of explains. This one will enrapture, then linger. O. Henry meets Patricia Highsmith meets Marilynne Robinson meets Lois Lowry meets Philip K. Dick.
Profile Image for Kate Ringer.
606 reviews2 followers
November 25, 2022
Two girls discover, at the age of ten, that if they press their foreheads together, they will switch bodies. The story follows them from there, all the way to age 30. The premise was everything to me in this book, and Schubach didn't disappoint with the arc of the story. What a metaphor, too, for the way that through friendship you can become so acquainted with the fabric of your best friend's life -- how you can remain a stranger to your best friend's mother, yet know some of the most intimate details of her life, for example.
Profile Image for Stella.
932 reviews34 followers
May 24, 2022
Another book about toxic female friendship except add in body swapping.

While this could be viewed as a gimmick, it adds an interesting element to this friendship....an element of double-crossing that others aren't able to add. It's more than just breaking into someone's phone or email account, reading someone's diary, and telling someone's secrets. It's literally living inside of someone's body.

Jess and Nina are connected in ways that are unexplainable. Best friends since childhood - with a brief break in their friendship after high school - the young women reconnect and fumble through a post 9/11 New York. They float through their lives, struggling with relationships and boundaries, the same boundaries that once broke them apart.

I loved everything about this book. The weirdness of the body-swapping, the various timelines, the toxicity of the friendship that endured despite everything.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publishers for the opportunity to read and review this book.
Profile Image for Zachary Downing.
Author 2 books6 followers
August 15, 2022
Great read that examines the concept of body-switching on an in-depth level. It takes the supernatural element of being in someone else's body, and shows it through a realistic lens of how it would affect your relationship with them. Great for anyone who enjoys the conceptual side of sci-fi.
Profile Image for David.
Author 6 books51 followers
August 9, 2022
"Smart" as in highly intellifgent and also "smart" as in smart*ss. Alanna Schubach has a great voice and a great sense of fun. The central idea is something I, for one, have not encountered in speculative fiction before; like the best spec-fic conceits it tells us something about our not-so-speculative real lives. The whole question of how well we really know oursleves and each other comes along at just the right time. How is the very idea of individual human identity changing right now? Read "The Nobodies" and find out. (Well, have it *suggested* to you.) Plus, add a new favorite author to your list.
Profile Image for Scott Brooks.
Author 1 book8 followers
July 2, 2022
Alanna Schubach's debut novel is replete with insight into human nature and displays great empathy and humor with intellect to spare. These characters will be instantly relatable. A fun head-scratcher of a concept as well!
Profile Image for Iphigenia.
479 reviews
Read
July 13, 2022
I wanted to read this book because the idea of two friends being able to switch bodies and experience each other's personas and lives was so compelling. But this book was so much more than the "trading bodies" idea. It was a deep dive into the nature of friendship. Recommended.
Profile Image for Allyssa (Book Ally).
246 reviews4 followers
July 3, 2022
RELEASE DATE 21 June 2022

Thank you to netgalley and blackstone publishing for this arc in exchange for an honest review

n this book we are following two girls/women, Nina and Jess. Both extremely different people, living very different lives. They meet at a very young age and connect straight away and have that instant typical bestie bond. Their connection however goes slightly deeper than the norm, because they can swap bodies.

It follows them through from childhood through to teens until they fall and then they reconnect again when they are older.

The premise of this book had me so intrigued. It sounded so unique and original and I love a great book about female friendships.

First off I reckon this would actually make a great movie because in all honesty I found if super confusing at times because your following both perspectives and then they are also swapping bodies so I was often thinking wait who is this speaking? Obviously if adapted to screen that wouldn't be an issue, because for me it actually did hinder my experience quite a bit because I was getting confused and having to reread parts again to figure out who was doing what.

Negatives aside this book was very interesting and also very hard to read at times. I felt it was a pretty accurate representation of young female relationships, especially toxic ones. I found Jess very unlikeable, not sure if that was the intention and I'd love to know what others who have read it felt about the characters. She came across as a user and very manipulative.

I also enjoyed the family and other relationship dynamics with each individual character and their own families/relationships. Both severely different which obviously made it all the more interesting to read about when they would swap.

I did enjoy the multiple timelines but maybe wish it was more defined by maybe a new chapter? I usually have a preference to one particular timeline but found them both very fascinating. I felt a lot with this book, I could relate to some of it, found some parts super cringe but probably rather realistic, I got annoyed, felt sympathy, felt uncomfortable and shocked by some parts.

I would love to have a look at a finished copy to see how it is laid out because I really feel like that could make or break an experience for someone reading this book and how confusing it can get! However I would recommend this book still, Maybe people who love a quirky book that's a bit weird.
Profile Image for Arthur Dutton.
19 reviews
October 4, 2022
A very well written debut novel that kept me intrigued from beginning to end. I think that if I wasn't me (perhaps due to body swapping?), I might give it five stars. But I don't think we can escape who we really are, so I'll have to acknowledge that this book wasn't really for me. There are a number of reasons for that, but the main point is that you aren't me and I could see why a lot of people - especially women - may love this book where I merely like it (but I do like it).

This is a book about two women with the unique ability to swap bodies with each other. While that could be a science fiction or fantasy premise, depending on how it is approached, it is primarily used as a narrative device in Nobodies. So I'll avoid discussing whether it is either or both of those genres as that is a distraction from the story at hand. As a narrative device, Schubach effectively uses body swapping to delve deep into female friendship at different stages of life. It feels autobiographical, largely in a good way where you get the sense she is drawing on a lot of personal experiences and reframing them in the relationship between the two main characters. The world she reveals is rich and nuanced and not one I felt that I could entirely relate to as a man.

But I think that's a good thing.

It bought this on a whim after reading a few positive reviews. I was expecting a somewhat more traditional sci fi exploration of the body swapping concept, but I'm glad I stayed for the journey the characters took. However, I think the Schubach missed a few opportunities to explore the concept further. She laid the groundwork for believable body swapping but didn't push it to any unexpected places. To an extent, that choice was in service to her characters and the story, but it still felt like an unfulfilled promise.

Overall, a well conceived and very well crafted story. It will be interesting to see what the author writes next.
Profile Image for C. Elizabeth.
929 reviews31 followers
August 23, 2022
I've spent the last week trying to figure out how I feel about The Nobodies, and even now I can't say whether I fully liked it or not, but what I can say is that I appreciated how it approached what's typically a sci-fi trope. The main characters' ability to swap bodies is never explained, the reasoning never even hinted at, and this was something I actually quite liked because the reason for it isn't important: it's what Jess and Nina do with that ability. Which, unfortunately, wasn't much. Although I liked the prose and seeing these women as girls growing into themselves (and each other), Schubach didn't go the full mile; we're told they did a lot of damage and seemingly did so to other people, when in reality the damage they do is to one another and themselves, and while I liked watching them sort of self-destruct because they were so enmeshed, I wanted more consequences for their actions. The consequences we did get were expected and not dealt with in a manner that satisfied me, but the codependency and jealousy kept me engaged, even if Nina and Jess (and everyone, honestly) were forgettable in the end.
"Just because we invent our personalities doesn't mean they're not real."
[...] "But what about what we really are, deep down?"
"No such thing," Jess said. "There's only what you do, and what you don't."
Profile Image for Arianna Mclaughlin (arianna.reads).
726 reviews27 followers
March 10, 2024
Pub: June 21, 2022

I picked The Nobodies off my shelf (that cover!) and jumped right in without reading the synopsis. This was the right approach for me as I'm not naturally drawn to magic realism and I'm really glad my preconceptions didn’t stop me from reading the book.

The Nobodies traces the decades long friendship between Jess and Nina. Yes, they switch bodies, but the story of their friendship is firmly grounded in reality.

Young girls are often drawn to magic and games of imagination. The rituals between Jess and Nina remind me of childhood games I played like Bloody Mary and seances with a Ouiji board.

Schubach does a great job capturing the different phases of female friendship and how jealousy, intense intimacy and a desire for connection can easily blur the lines between love and hate.

Don't skip over The Nobodies - there is so much depth to the story that makes it worth your time.

Thank you to Blackstone for the gifted finished copy of the book.
Profile Image for Stroop.
626 reviews13 followers
July 5, 2022
Nina and Jess can swap bodies with the touch of their foreheads. The more they swap, the more the boundaries between them blur and the shakier the trust. This is the story of a powerful, toxic friendship between two young women. I appreciated the premise and the writing is lovely but ultimately found the story a bit too creepy and tense for my taste.

The story takes place between 1992 and 2018 and moves back and forth through various years, as we learn more about Nina and Jess, and their unique relationship. Recommended to readers looking for a moody, thought-provoking read about adolescence, envy, and love.
Profile Image for Hannah.
170 reviews20 followers
July 18, 2022
I’m not going to lie, I was a little bored when reading. I enjoyed some bits and pieces but overall it wasn’t what I would typically pick up.

This story is so thought-provoking. Imagine if you and your childhood best friend are able to trade bodies by touching your foreheads together. I’m not sure what exactly I expected going into this, but I was pleasantly surprised.

The book follows Nina and Jess, two girls with different personalities. They find out they are able to switch bodies and live inside the other to experience life from the other’s perspective. I enjoyed how this book followed Jess and Nina into adulthood as well and touched on several real topics including domestic abuse, relationships, and grief.
Profile Image for Nora.
270 reviews11 followers
July 25, 2022
Two best friends can swap bodies whenever they want. What a cool idea for a YA book! It's also a book about friendship. But, in this case, the friendship is toxic and both girls use each other, and it wasn't fun to read about. These characters were believable, but not particularly kind. I just didn't care about their lives after seeing what they would do to their best friend with no remorse. Not for me.
Profile Image for Michael Norwitz.
Author 13 books9 followers
December 12, 2022
The novel tells the story of two young women who, as children, learn they have the ability to switch bodies, and the expected antics ensue. I found the prose and characters a bit uninspiring, and felt a lot more could have been done with the premise. Still, a reasonably enjoyable read for someone interested in borderline-urban fantasy focused on female relationships.
Profile Image for Joanna.
166 reviews2 followers
January 17, 2023
I really enjoyed this book. Sad to see it seems to have gone fairly unnoticed! Story of female friendship with a hint of sci fi.
Displaying 1 - 28 of 28 reviews

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