![]() She goes through the day as usual, with her super popular friends, ruling the school and bullying all who annoy her, including Juliet Sykes, the beautiful and quiet girl she and her friends have been bullying since sixth grade. Today is also the day she's supposed to lose her virginity to Rob. On the first day, Cupid's Day, Sam is more concerned with how many roses she'll receive from her friends, signaling her popularity, than studying for her classes. The last thing Sam remembers is laughing with her friends in Lindsey's car, leaving a party, when there's a flash of light, something running in front of the car, and then the squeal of tires, blackness, nothing. In the prologue of the novel, the narrator, Sam Kingston, recalls the "greatest hits" of her short-lived life, saying that if she could choose to relive any of those days, she would, but the truth is that when you die, you never know it's going to be your last day. For the next seven days, Sam is forced to relive the day of her death, slowly peeling away layers of truth to find a deeper understanding of what it means to love, lose, and live. After attending a huge party with her friends, Samantha gets in the car with a drunk driver, crashes, and dies. ![]() ![]() Cupid's Day is supposed to be the most exciting day of the year for high school senior Samantha "Sam" Kingston and her friends, Lindsey, Ally, and Elody. ![]()
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