<p>Praise for Something Inbetween:</p>
<p>`Jasmine's fairytale-turned-nightmare story will have you laughing, seething, relating, crying, and cheering. A great love story, a great heroine, a great family...simply a great read!'-Rachel Cohn, New York Times bestselling co-author of Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist</p>
<p>`This book has everything-a strong heroine, important issues and a really cute crush. We're obsessed-and you will be too.' -The Editors of SEVENTEEN Magazine</p>
<p>`Wow. Something in Between hit me right in the heart, challenging what we understand of love, law, identity, ambition, and the American Dream. Both heartbreaking and bursting with hope, this is the book we all need.' -Marie Lu, #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Young Elites and Legend series</p>
<p>`Something In Between takes readers on an emotional rollercoaster that's full of laughter, heartbreak, and real world realities for many. De la Cruz is a wordsmith; her prose full of heart. Her character Jasmine's dilemma will linger in the minds of all. This book will change you. A must read.' -Dhonielle Clayton, co-author of Tiny Pretty Things and Shiny Broken Pieces, and the forthcoming The Belles</p>
Sharp, funny, contemporary young adult romance. perfect for readers who love Jenny Han's To All The Boys I've Loved Before and Sandhya Menon's When Dimple met Rishi
Seventeen-year old Ji-Su Kim is on a seon date with Dae-Hyun Kang, a young man from a good family that was set-up by a fancy matchmaker.
Unlike Ji who is in San Francisco as an exchange student from Seoul, Dae is Korean-American. But their families are similar, both are from wealthy, aspirational Korean families who want nothing more than ambitious Harvard-bound doctors and lawyers.
Ji is tired of these dates, she has no interest in any of them, and is rude and a bit cold to Dae, who is unexpectedly charming and just as bored with these dates (turns out he has a blonde American girlfriend).
But even as Ji realizes she's attracted to Dae, it'll never work out (girlfriend aside). Because everyone knows that 29 is the unluckiest number - anything ending with a `9' is considered unlucky in Korea -it's bad luck, even worse than bad luck. She tells Dae that he's cursed, and he laughs
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Melissa de la Cruz is the author of many best-selling novels, including the Blue Bloods series; the Au Pairs series; the Ashleys series; and Angels on Sunset Boulevard. She is also a frequent contributor to Glamour, Marie Claire, Teen Vogue, and Cosmopolitan. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and daughter, and is hard at work on her next book.