The Boy You Always Wanted
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- $189.00
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- $189.00
Descripción editorial
From Not Here to Be Liked author Michelle Quach comes a smartly funny, heartfelt story told in dual POV about a young woman roping in her childhood crush to act as an honorary male heir to fulfill her grandfather’s dying wish. A story about first love, familial duties, and finding yourself—perfect for fans of Emiko Jean and Loan Le.
Francine loves her grandfather, but their time together is running out. He has one final wish: to see a male heir carry on the family traditions. Francine knows his ideas are outdated, but she would do anything for him. Her solution? Ask Ollie Tran, a family friend (and former crush, not that it matters), to pretend to be ceremonially adopted and act like the grandson her A Gung never had.
Ollie has always made a point of avoiding the odd, too blunt (and fine, sort of cute) Francine, whose intensity has always made him uncomfortable. So when she asks him to help deceive her dying A Gung, Ollie’s definitely not down. He doesn’t get why anyone would go to such lengths, even for family. Especially with a backwards (and sexist, Ollie keeps stressing) scheme like this.
Francine, however, is determined to make it work, and soon Ollie finds himself more invested in her plan—and in her—than he ever thought possible. But as the tangled lies and feelings pile up, Francine will have to discover what exactly she needs for herself—and from Ollie. Because sometimes the boy you always wanted isn’t what you expected.
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Seventeen-year-old Francine Zhang must convince her conflict-averse classmate Ollie Tran to honor Francine's A Guˉng's dying wish in this feel-good novel by Quach (Not Here to Be Liked). After Francine learns that her grandfather worries about not having a male heir to carry on the family traditions, she approaches estranged friend Ollie with "The Plan": "Could you pretend to be my A Guˉng's honorary male heir?" Since Ollie is also of Chinese Vietnamese descent, and the teens' families are old friends, he seems an ideal, if unwilling, candidate. When his concerns surrounding lackluster extracurriculars on his college résumé become prevalent, however, he agrees to the ploy in exchange for Francine's help in joining a club. As Francine confronts the self-imposed pressure to be a perfect problem solver and Ollie's membership in the school's Multicultural Club forces him to connect with his family in new and unfamiliar ways, romantic feelings blossom. While a quick resolution somewhat deflates the protagonists' arcs, Quach spins, via Francine and Ollie's alternating perspectives, an emotionally raw portrait of two seemingly opposite teens as they come together to help alleviate each other's personal challenges and grow romantically closer in the process. Ages 13–up.