A teen devises a plan to make her crush fall for her.
Ever since that fateful first day of freshman year, Indian American Payal Mehta has been enamored with blond-haired, blue-eyed classmate Jon Slate. Fast-forward three years: Payal encounters Jon at a party, and after she bravely suggests they hang out, Jon vomits on her shoes. Later, when Payal is injured at school, squeamish Jon vomits again (fortunately near, but not on, her). When he buys her lunch as an apology, Payal is sure their love story is just beginning. They seem to be hitting it off over Taco Bell until Jon, who’s white, says things that make it clear that her being a brown girl rules out any romantic possibilities. Her best friends, Neil Patel and Divya Bhatt, and even her prickly school rival, Korean American Philip Kim, advise Payal to move on. But, still hung up on Jon’s description of her as “funny and cute,” Payal convinces herself that she can make him fall for her. She promises to let Philip take full credit for their psych project if he helps her, overriding his initial criticism of what he dubs “Operation End Racism With Love.” Payal’s naïveté is comically delusional, but her determination to make herself appealing to Jon offers insights into how people can suppress parts of who they are in order to feel accepted, as well as the importance of being genuinely embraced.
A cute romance that explores valuable themes around self-esteem.
(Romance. 13-18)