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We Can't Keep Meeting Like This

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"Impossible not to love." —Rachael Lippincott, #1 New York Times bestselling coauthor of Five Feet Apart

A wedding harpist disillusioned with love and a hopeless romantic cater-waiter flirt and fight their way through a summer of weddings in this effervescent romantic comedy from the acclaimed author of Today Tonight Tomorrow.
Quinn Berkowitz and Tarek Mansour's families have been in business together for years: Quinn's parents are wedding planners, and Tarek's own a catering company. At the end of last summer, Quinn confessed her crush on him in the form of a rambling email—and then he left for college without a response.

Quinn has been dreading seeing him again almost as much as she dreads another summer playing the harp for her parents' weddings. When he shows up at the first wedding of the summer, looking cuter than ever after a year apart, they clash immediately. Tarek's always loved the grand gestures in weddings—the flashier, the better—while Quinn can't see them as anything but fake. Even as they can't seem to have one civil conversation, Quinn's thrown together with Tarek wedding after wedding, from performing a daring cake rescue to filling in for a missing bridesmaid and groomsman.

Quinn can't deny her feelings for him are still there, especially after she learns the truth about his silence, opens up about her own fears, and begins learning the art of harp-making from an enigmatic teacher. Maybe love isn't the enemy after all—and maybe allowing herself to fall is the most honest thing Quinn's ever done.
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    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2021
      A week after graduating from high school, Quinn Berkowitz is unsure what to do with her life. Quinn's Jewish family runs a wedding planning business in Seattle called Borrowed + Blue, and they assume that, after earning a business degree in college, she will join them. For years, Quinn has gone along with this, partly because she wonders whether leaving the business would mean losing her connection to her parents and her sister, Asher, who sometimes feel more like colleagues than family. But her future career isn't the only thing Quinn is confused about. Working at weddings all summer means that she will be in constant contact with Tarek Mansour, the Egyptian American son of her parents' favorite caterers. Before he left for college, Quinn sent Tarek an email confessing that she had a crush on him--an email he never answered. Although Quinn tells herself that they were never meant to be--Tarek is a hopeless romantic whereas she doesn't believe in love--her feelings won't go away. As the summer progresses, Quinn must make some tough choices about her future, her family, and a boy who might very well be her first love. Quinn's narratorial voice is engaging and clever, deftly balancing humor and sincerity, and her OCD is woven naturally into a story with characters who are layered enough to keep readers interested. An entertaining romance that explores deeper themes of trust and expectations. (Romance. 12-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 26, 2021
      Having grown up with her family’s wedding planning business, Borrowed + Blue, Quinn Berkowitz knows the ropes, including sanding the bridal party’s shoes and how to play the harp. Too bad she doesn’t know how to tell her folks that she’s not interested in joining their business, or that her parents’ six-month separation—and subsequent failure to talk about it—has made her doubt marriage, and love, altogether. In the summer after her senior year, white, Jewish Quinn, who has generalized anxiety disorder and OCD, also faces the return of a childhood friend, Egyptian American Tarek Mansour, whose family caters many of the weddings that hers plans. They haven’t spoken since he left for college a year ago, after Quinn confessed her crush on him and then never heard back. The two eventually restart their friendship—and more—navigating food poisoning, wedding crises, and tension about whether a huge romantic like Tarek and a commitment-phobe like Quinn can make things work. Solomon (Today, Tonight, Tomorrow) shows how Quinn’s brain can get in her way, expertly weaving anxiety and depression with the love and the pleasures and terrors of trying to find one’s path. Ages 12–up. Agent: Laura Bradford, Bradford Literary.

    • Booklist

      June 1, 2021
      Grades 10-12 Quinn Berkowitz's family is in the business of weddings. It's the summer before Quinn's first year of college, and her parents have her future at Borrowed & Blue, their wedding-planning business, all planned--but Quinn already knows she doesn't want it. Making matters worse is the fact that she's spending her summer working weddings with Tarek Mansour, the son of the caterers her family works with, and the boy to whom Quinn confessed her feelings for in an ill-advised email last summer. It was an email he never bothered responding to, and Quinn knows it's for the best: Tarek is a hopeless romantic who believes in grand gestures, while Quinn generally prefers not to get attached and can't even tell him about her OCD. But as the summer unfolds, Quinn can't deny that she still wants more, from Tarek and from her life. Solomon (Today, Tonight, Tomorrow, 2020) offers up a compelling portrait about one girl grappling with the nature of desire in all its forms--romantic, sexual, personal. A layered read for romance fans.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:790
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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