A U.S. embassy lawyer’s daughter fake-dates a Scottish celebrity for a summer.
Bookish loner Astoria “Story” Herriot is about to graduate from a private American school in Rome, where she was bullied by the popular clique of diplomatic corps kids. Story’s plans to spend her last summer before Princeton volunteering at a farm sanctuary and hanging out with her single mom are interrupted when she visits a gelateria at the same time as gorgeous Scottish influencer Luca Kinnaird and international queen of pop Jasmine as they evade the paparazzi. After Jasmine escapes through a back exit, Luca pretends Story is his tour guide so the press won’t discover that he’s Jasmine’s new fling when she’s supposedly dating a fellow musician who’s actually in rehab. Wealthy, charming Luca offers Story a fauxmance in exchange for funding a memorial scholarship in her late father’s name, but as the two grow closer, attending countless society events together, it becomes clear that their class differences can’t curb their opposites-attract chemistry. Some of the dialogue is rough (for example, the overuse of jerk and inconsistencies in Luca’s speech), and some of the characters’ behaviors stretch believability (such as Story’s decision not to Google Luca). The author lightly weaves in mature themes of substance abuse, parental death, and class inequity, but the narrative remains an appealing, younger teen–friendly homage to Roman Holiday. Main characters are cued white.
A frothy romance.
(Romance. 12-17)