Review Detail
Young Adult Indie
322
Brilliant deconstruction of stereotypes
Overall rating
5.0
Writing Style
N/A
Plot
N/A
Characters
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
The Story:
At Twin Rivers High (like in most schools), stereotypes abound. People are judged on their appearances, and that label sticks no matter how untrue it is. Take Nari Won Song - born to Korean parents, wears thick glasses, is quiet and shy ... well, she must be NERD right? She's smart and is great at math and doesn't have a cool bone in her body. Avery is still covering emotionally from a devastating accident that claimed the life of his bast friend. His alcoholic father is tearing his family apart, and he is less and less convinced that being a football hero is his path in life. He convinces Nari to be his "fake girlfriend" to make his bitchy ex Meghan jealous, but this is a smokescreen - he wants to rebuild a friendship he once had with Nari, maybe turn it into something beautiful.
What I loved:
Pretty uch everything. Nari is a wonderful haracter, and instantly relatable. Avery is sympathetic if not very likable (at least at first), and they are a completely mismatched couple. They shouldn't work together as a couple - fake or real - but somehow they do. As teens are wont to do, many mistakes are made, but you never stop rooting for them. That's a testament to the depth of these characters.
What I didn't love:
Can't think of a thing.
Final Verdict;
This is exactly the kind of book (and series) that teens and kids should read. Stereotypes exist for a reason (anyone who's watched The Breakfast Club in the last three decades knows this), and any book that shines a light on this tendency - or better, blasts it to smithereens - is worth your time. When two brilliant authors get together to tell a story like this, it needs to be read.
At Twin Rivers High (like in most schools), stereotypes abound. People are judged on their appearances, and that label sticks no matter how untrue it is. Take Nari Won Song - born to Korean parents, wears thick glasses, is quiet and shy ... well, she must be NERD right? She's smart and is great at math and doesn't have a cool bone in her body. Avery is still covering emotionally from a devastating accident that claimed the life of his bast friend. His alcoholic father is tearing his family apart, and he is less and less convinced that being a football hero is his path in life. He convinces Nari to be his "fake girlfriend" to make his bitchy ex Meghan jealous, but this is a smokescreen - he wants to rebuild a friendship he once had with Nari, maybe turn it into something beautiful.
What I loved:
Pretty uch everything. Nari is a wonderful haracter, and instantly relatable. Avery is sympathetic if not very likable (at least at first), and they are a completely mismatched couple. They shouldn't work together as a couple - fake or real - but somehow they do. As teens are wont to do, many mistakes are made, but you never stop rooting for them. That's a testament to the depth of these characters.
What I didn't love:
Can't think of a thing.
Final Verdict;
This is exactly the kind of book (and series) that teens and kids should read. Stereotypes exist for a reason (anyone who's watched The Breakfast Club in the last three decades knows this), and any book that shines a light on this tendency - or better, blasts it to smithereens - is worth your time. When two brilliant authors get together to tell a story like this, it needs to be read.
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