Today Tonight Tomorrow - Rachel Lynn Solomon Page 0,108

Seattle first.

Cities are perennial works in progress, and it’s possible some of the setting details have changed by the time you’re reading this. More and more of my favorite holes-in-the-wall are becoming condos and townhomes, and before they were my favorite holes-in-the-wall, they were someone else’s favorite something else.

This is my third book that takes place in Seattle, but there is still so much I don’t know about the place that’s always been my home. If and when I leave this setting behind, it will always be in my veins and in my storyteller’s soul.

Seattle, you are weird and wonderful, and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Acknowledgments

THIS BOOK IS a happy one, but I began writing it during a difficult time. While I have always been drawn to dark and heavy books, for months after the 2016 election, I couldn’t bring myself to open one of the many guaranteed heartbreakers waiting on my shelf. I wanted to read—I don’t know who I am if I’m not in the middle of three books at once—but nothing was calling to me. And that’s when I found romance novels.

I’ve always loved romantic subplots, but I was largely unfamiliar with romance as a genre, and the more I read, the more I realized this was what I wanted to do next. My first two books had bittersweet endings and plenty of levity, but there was also a lot of despair. I didn’t know if I could write a fun book—even all my shelved manuscripts are dark dark dark—and yet suddenly, it was all I wanted to write. Rowan wasn’t actually a romance novelist in my first draft, but after I’d spent so much time learning the genre, it felt right to turn her into one. Nora Roberts, Meg Cabot, Christina Lauren, Alyssa Cole, Tessa Dare, Alisha Rai, Sally Thorne, Courtney Milan—without their books, I wouldn’t have been able to write a romance about romance.

I’m ashamed to admit that my younger self was a lot like Neil, a lot like the people who judge an entire piece of pop culture before reading, watching, listening. The truth is that romance novels made me really and truly happy in a way books had never made me feel before. I’ll always love dark books, and darkness finds its way into romance novels too, but there is such a comfort in knowing an HEA is waiting for you. And yet it still manages to feel earth-shattering every single time.

There aren’t enough adjectives for my phenomenal editor, Jennifer Ung. Thank you for being immediately on board with a book so tonally different from my first two. Somehow you understand exactly what I’m trying to do, even when my intentions get lost between my brain and the page. My books are infinitely better because of you.

Thank you to Mara Anastas and the brilliant team at Simon Pulse: Chriscynethia Floyd, Liesa Abrams, Michelle Leo, Amy Beaudoin, Sarah Woodruff, Ana Perez, Amanda Livingston, Christine Foye, Christina Pecorale, Emily Hutton, Lauren Hoffman, Caitlin Sweeny, Alissa Nigro, Savannah Breckenridge, Nicole Russo, Lauren Carr, Anna Jarzab, Chelsea Morgan, Sara Berko, Rebecca Vitkus, and Penina Lopez. Laura Eckes, thank you for designing the cover of my dreams, and Laura Breiling, thank you for the perfect, perfect illustrations. To complete the Laura trifecta, thank you to my agent, Laura Bradford, for soothing my author anxiety and making the business side of writing run so smoothly.

Kelsey Rodkey, maybe it’s fitting that this book begins and ends with you. The insightful notes, the pep talks, the flailing, the memes… thank you for all of it. I adore you, and your friendship is so dear to me. HAGS! I’m immensely grateful to the friends who offered feedback in various stages of this book’s life: Sonia Hartl, Carlyn Greenwald, Tara Tsai, Marisa Kanter, Rachel Griffin, Rachel Simon, Heather Ezell, Annette Christie, Monica Gomez-Hira, and Auriane Desombre. Thank you to my publishing confidantes Joy McCullough, Gloria Chao, Kit Frick, and Rosiee Thor, and thank you to my favorite coffee shop coworker, Tori Sharp. I am never letting any of you go!

I shared the earliest version of this book at a Djerassi workshop in June 2017, helmed by the spectacular Nova Ren Suma. Thank you, Nova, and thank you to Alison Cherry, Tamara Mahmood Hayes, Cass Frances, Imani Josey, Nora Revenaugh, Sara Ingle, Randy Ribay, and Kim Graff. That week in the mountains was one of the highlights of my career.

Ivan: these are the first acknowledgments where I can call you my husband! I’m so glad you’re my person, and thank you for making the best deadline food.

It’s always a little terrifying sending a book out into the world, and the support from readers, bloggers, booksellers, librarians, and teachers has made that experience much less terrifying. You all are INCREDIBLE, and I’m grateful beyond words for the posts, tweets, emails, and word of mouth that have helped make it possible for me to keep doing my dream job. With all of my heart, thank you.

More from the Author

Our Year of Maybe

You'll Miss Me When I'm Gone

About the Author

Rachel Lynn Solomon writes, tap dances, and collects lipstick in Seattle. She is the author of You’ll Miss Me When I’m Gone, Our Year of Maybe, and Today Tonight Tomorrow. A longtime Pitch Wars mentor, she lives near a zoo with her husband and her tiny dog. You can find her online at rachelsolomonbooks.com and on Twitter and Instagram @rlynn_solomon.

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RACHEL LYNN SOLOMON

You’ll Miss Me When I’m Gone

Our Year of Maybe

This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

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First Simon Pulse hardcover edition June 2020

Text copyright © 2020 by Rachel Lynn Solomon

Jacket illustration copyright © 2020 by Laura Breiling

Illustrations on pages i, vii, 9, 23, 33, 43, 61, 101, 113, 126, 138, 157, 169, 213, 221, 233, 252, 266, 329, 336, 346, 352, 359, and 365 copyright © 2020 by Laura Breiling

Confidential stamp on page 69 by Zerbor/iStock

Emojis on pages 98, 127, 144, 222, 224, and 360 by denisgorelkin/iStock

Wolf illustration on pages 86, 150, 199, and 292 by Omar Mouhib/iStock

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Designed by Laura Eckes

Jacket designed by Laura Eckes

Jacket illustration copyright © 2020 by Laura Breiling

Author photograph by Sabreen Lakhani

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Solomon, Rachel Lynn, author.

Title: Today tonight tomorrow / by Rachel Lynn Solomon.

Description: Hardcover. | New York : Simon Pulse, 2020. | Audience: Ages 12 and Up. | Audience: Grades 10-12. | Summary: “Throughout the years both Rowan and Neil have been at competition with one another on everything from who has the best ideas for school functions to which one will be their graduating class’s valedictorian.

However, in the twenty-four hours left they have as high school students, the two learn they share something much deeper than a rivalry”—Provided by publisher.

Identifiers: LCCN 2019029488 (print) | LCCN 2019029489 (eBook) | ISBN 9781534440241 (hardcover) | ISBN 9781534440265 (eBook)

Subjects: CYAC: High schools—Fiction. | Schools—Fiction. | Competition

(Psychology)—Fiction. | Love—Fiction. | Jews—United States—Fiction.

Classification: LCC PZ7.1.S6695 Tod 2020 (print) | LCC PZ7.1.S6695 (eBook) | DDC [Fic]—dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019029488

LC eBook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2019029489

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