Parvin Mohammadi is about to start high school with something she’s never had before: a boyfriend.
After a summer of hijinks on the beach, Wesley finally asks Parvin out—after giving her a romantic first kiss. But a few days later, at freshman orientation, Wesley dumps Parvin for being “too much.” Determined to make Wesley jealous, the Iranian/White 14-year-old decides to get bisexual sophomore dreamboat Matty Fumero to ask her to homecoming. But she’s convinced that she’s going to have to change into the kind of girl she thinks boys like: someone quiet, shy, and the opposite of everything that makes Parvin herself. Parvin’s best friends—gay, Mexican American Fabian and pansexual, Korean American Ruth—don’t approve of her plan, but they stand by her nonetheless. Even better, despite the government ban on travelers from several majority-Muslim countries, Parvin’s aunt Sara is hoping to visit from Iran in a few months, and Parvin knows that she can do anything with her favorite relative by her side. In the process of trying to redo her personality, Parvin starts to realize who she really is, who she wants to be, and, most importantly, whose love she can count on no matter who she might become. Parvin’s narratorial voice sparkles with wit and pathos, and her journey toward self-acceptance seamlessly incorporates political and emotional realities. Characters, including Parvin’s enemies, family, and friends, are fully developed and a pleasure to read about.
A diverse, fast-paced, feminist romance.
(Romance. 13-18)