Former friends compete with one another for a new student’s affections.
High school seniors Caleb Daniels and Emma Jones were childhood friends, but they stopped talking after eighth grade. Protecting recent transfer Juliet Higgins (who’s queer and coded Black) from a bully lands Caleb in a fight he can’t handle. After Emma jumps in to rescue him, the two, who find Juliet very attractive, enter a competition for her heart: “Whoever she kisses first gets to ask her out.” Vying for Juliet’s attention brings Caleb and Emma (who are both white and bisexual) into frequent contact; as they repeatedly crash the other’s hangouts, their shared history intrudes, and their romantic feelings for each other become impossible to ignore. Caleb’s also struggling to bond with his absentee dad, while Emma is living out of her car after her tense relationship with her mother came to a boiling point. Caleb and Emma are vividly drawn, each with believable quirks, strengths, and weaknesses. The secondary characters, such as Juliet and Caleb’s mom, are also endearing. Because the narration alternates between the leads’ points of view, readers largely get to know Juliet through Caleb’s and Emma’s idealized, somewhat flattening perspectives. The dialogue, which includes a healthy dose of swear words and snark, rings true. While Caleb and Emma’s evolving relationship is the star of the show, friendships and familial relationships also play key roles.
A funny, heartfelt ride with two lovable leads.
(content note) (Fiction. 14-18)