Switched
For Serena Otaki, free-spirited Californian, life is simple. She loves smashing atoms at The Large Hadron Collider near Geneva, Switzerland. She loves Star Trek, spicy tofu, and her cat, Captain Purrk. She loves her messy (slob-fest) apartment, her chaotic brand of organizing, and staying permanently, happily unattached.
Life is perfect. She has one true love—physics.
Loving a man isn’t in her future.
For Henry Joule, uptight Brit, life is simple. He loves making analog black holes, drinking piping hot tea, and organizing his pencil tray. He loves his family, red meat, and obsessively cleaning his spotless apartment.
Life is perfect. He has many loves—physics, family, friends. He can’t wait to find the woman of his dreams.
Love and marriage are in his future.
One perfect night Serena and Henry meet. Sparks fly, particles collide, the universe comes to a halt, and…
It was a mistake.
They’re too different.
It won’t work.
Love isn’t in their future.
Until an electric storm causes an unexpected event at the particle collider and suddenly—they’ve switched.
Serena is in Henry’s body.
Henry is in Serena’s body.
And both life and love are suddenly very, very complicated.
“…an insightful commentary on the impossibility of having it all”
Kirkus Reviews on Switched
“Ready’s twisty plot keeps readers guessing how this couple could possibly reach a happy ending.”
Publishers Weekly review on Ghosted
SEE WHAT MY READERS HAVE TO SAY
Read the Switched Excerpt
I’VE ALWAYS BELIEVED THAT THINGS ARE ONLY IMPOSSIBLE until they’re not. For instance: particle physics, space travel, and sex on a tree branch. Everyone thinks, “My gosh, those are impossible! They can’t possibly happen!”
But then they do.
They do.
Everyone has instances of the impossible becoming possible in their own lives. I don’t mean HUGE things like teleporting or dating an alien—I mean things like winning the state science fair against all odds or having their cancer miraculously disappear. These things happen.
Of course, HUGE impossible things become possible every day. Remember the world’s oldest Twinkie? No one thought it could stay fresh for decades, but here it is, deliciously edible since 1976.
Anyway, the impossible is only impossible until it isn’t.
Because I’m a physicist and I have a particular affinity for graphs, lists, charts, and visual aids, I’ve included a list to show a few of the once impossible things in life that became possible.
Fair warning, life is more fun with:
Charts
Graphs
Tables
Footnotes1
Bullet points
Okay, here it is.
THE THINGS ONCE THOUGHT IMPOSSIBLE UNTIL THEY BECAME POSSIBLE:
1 million BC—Humans master fire (and have the first hot date with cooked mammoth and kissing).2
3500 BC—The wheel (need I say more?).
1876—The telephone (and phone sex).
1901—Wireless transmission across the Atlantic.
1961—Space travel.
1996—I was born, because impossibly, both the condom and birth control failed.
2004—I melted Barbie and Ken using only a potato battery and my Easy-Bake Oven.
2010—The first atom was smashed at the Large Hadron Collider and I met Spock.
2012—I lost my virginity to Bernie Berger in the kitchen pantry while my parents obliviously watched Weird Science in the living room.
2018—I’m awarded a double PhD in Physics and Computer Science at age 22.
2020—I land my dream job at CERN, smashing atoms.
2022—I’m stuck to the seat of the wooden pub booth at The Cock and Bull.
2022—Also, the guy at the table across from mine won’t stop staring.
2022—No, I mean I’m really, really stuck. As in, my jeans are practically glued to the wooden seat and they won’t budge. How is this even possible? It’s not.
I tug at my thighs, pry at my jeans, and wiggle-jerk from left to right. There’s no fixing it. Somehow, impossibly, I’m glued to the wooden seat in the booth at the back of my favorite pub. It’s ridiculous, impossible, embarrassing.
Okay, Serena, pull yourself together. You’re a scientist —you can get out of any sticky situation life throws at you.
I gather energy, brace my palms on the tacky wooden tabletop, and shove upward as hard as I can, trying to burst free from my unlikely prison. I move all of a quarter inch, then rebound hard back to the wood.
“Umph.”
I collapse back against the booth and let out a frustrated breath. Then I surreptitiously glance from the side of my eyes at the small, round table next to mine. Yup, the man is still staring while pretending not to stare.
I’ve never seen him here before, which is why I don’t call him over and ask him to brace himself against the booth edge and yank me free from my seat. I’ve seen some odd things in this pub over the years, but if he’s new here, he may not be inured to all the pub’s oddities.
The Cock and Bull is a tiny, rough stone-walled and thick wooden-raftered homely British pub owned by a short, hairy Italian named Vinny Vincenzo. There’s the usual dark wood and plaid décor, British kitsch, and football (a.k.a. soccer) playing over the bar. The lights are low, the TVs flicker over the dull, sticky wood counters and floors, and instead of amplifying the sound, the old stone walls muffle everything to a garbled murmur.
The pub attracts zombie-eyed, post-five o’clock working schlubs from the neighborhood, rowdy students searching for cheap beer, homesick Brits, and the occasional tourist. I don’t really fit the mold, but I live around the corner, and Vinny makes the best French fries I’ve ever tasted.
The pub is a rarity in Geneva since it’s not Swiss, French, or moldy cheese-peddling. Plus it has cheap beer and gives out free eight-inch dill pickles with the purchase of a pint. That’s why the dim interior always smells like pickle vinegar and hoppy beer sunk into centuries-old gray stone. I wander in every Tuesday around six o’clock and grab my usual booth in the back. Tuesday night is my me night, when I have a date with myself. I order a two euro pilsner, a long, fat pickle that is so sour my lips pucker, a basket of crisp, buttery, steaming-hot golden fries, and then I pull out my notebook and try to break my mind with new theories about everything. Or at least theories
about the fundamental laws of nature.
There are very few windows and even fewer tables, which is why I always make a beeline to the back corner, where there’s a small, out-of-the-way two-person booth that no one ever notices. It has a scarred, scratched mahogany table with permanently sticky varnish, two hard wooden seats, and a little colored green glass lamp that casts a small pool of light across the tabletop.
It’s a really nice spot. A great spot.
Except. I’ve never not been able to move.
I try to stand again, pushing my feet into the wood floor and bracing against the booth. I grit my teeth and shove, but my thighs won’t budge. The table shakes, and I make a sound of frustration.
The stranger sitting at the table across from me raises his eyebrows. Now he’s not even trying to hide the fact that he’s watching me.
“Excusez-moi,” I say, feeling irritable.
At that, the edge of his mouth quirks into an amused half-smile.
“Are you British?” he asks in a proper Oxford accent.
“American? Canadian?”
He tilts his head and gives me an expectant, open look.
It’s not a hard deduction. We’re in Geneva, Switzerland, home of the UN where nationalities collide
and bump along every day. Plus, my French accent is terrible and I look a bit like the love child of Daisuke Serizawa (minus the eyepatch) and Lady Godiva (minus the nakedness), which most men find compelling (a.k.a. I feature in a lot of morning wood fantasies). So that means I’m an easy mark to—
Wait. A. Second.
He’s been watching me. He was here before I arrived.
He has a slight smile hovering at the edge of his mouth.
He . . .
Listen to the Audio
Check out this sample of Switched, narrated by Kelsey Navarro Foster and James Anderson Foster.
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DETAILS
Publish date: February 20, 2024
Publisher: Swift & Lewis Publishing LLC
ISBN: eBook 978-1-954007-65-9
ISBN: Paperback 978-1-954007-68-0
ISBN: Lg Print 978-1-954007-69-7
ISBN: Hardback 978-1-954007-70-3
ISBN: Audiobook 978-1-954007-71-0