Rani Choudhury Must Die
A sapphic rivals-to-lovers romance
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- 5,99 zł
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- 5,99 zł
Publisher Description
Meghna and Rani used to be friends. Now they're bitter rivals. Or are they?
When Meghna fails to make it to the final round of a competition but her boyfriend Zak and her rival Rani do, she thinks things can't get much worse. Until she discovers Zak has been cheating on her. With Rani.
Soon she realises Rani is also a victim and they team up to expose Zak as a cheater in front of all the judges he is so eager to please. And as the two girls grow closer, they begin to question their feelings for one another and why they ever became enemies in the first place . . .
Rivals team up to get revenge on the boy who wronged them both in this new sapphic YA enemies-to-lovers novel by award-winning author Adiba Jaigirdar.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
When two Bangladeshi Irish teens realize they're dating the same boy, they team up to expose him at a regional STEM competition in this hijinks-filled romance by Jaigirdar (The Dos and Donuts of Love). Now that Meghna Rahman's project has been accepted into the regional Young Scientist Exhibition (for the first time ever), she's determined to beat perpetual attendee Rani Choudhury. Meghna has always had a rivalry with her childhood friend: her own parents constantly sing Rani's praises, particularly for Rani's language-learning app that centers Bangla, which is a big draw at the exhibition. After Meghna spots Rani canoodling with her boyfriend and fellow young scientist Zak, she confronts Rani. Upon learning that Zak has been cheating on them both, the girls collaborate on a new app for the upcoming European exhibition in Amsterdam that exposes cheaters. But brainstorming and coding in proximity forces them to realize that their relationship might go deeper than simple cordial rivalry. Meghna and Rani's thinly developed backstory sometimes raises questions about their established relationship. Still, their humorous banter buoys the STEM-heavy plot, which deftly explores issues of race and gender in science. Ages 14–up.