For fans of TIES THAT TETHER, HONEY GIRL, and YOU HAD ME AT HOLA, a Latinx, queer retelling of Shakespeare's MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING, set in the early days of the Trump presidency, in which a queer, biracial young woman must untangle her complicated relationship with the scion of a wealthy, white dynasty, in what becomes a complex and nuanced rumination on race, colorism, class, sexuality, and privilege.
Which of his bad qualities did she fall for first?
Harvard senior Beatriz Herrera does not have a post-graduation plan. What she does have is a shaved head, a sharp tongue, political views that skew so far left she's this close to eating the rich, and deeply rooted trauma from the results of the 2016 election.Still, she would do anything for her sweet, opposite-from-her-in-every-way prima, Hero. Even if it means watching Hero and her boyfriend, Claudio, make googly eyes at each other all spring break. And even if it means spending that week at the Cape Cod mansion of Claudio's best friend and Beatriz's worst nightmare: arrogantly attractive playboy Ben Montgomery. Ben is everything Beatriz can't stand: he's white, he's rich, his taste in literature is the embodiment of toxic masculinity, he's already got a post-grad job lined up in Boston's Financial District (with a cushy loft that's paid for, of course), and he's a walking reminder of the steamy night they spent together four years ago, during their very first week of college. A night that cemented her disdain toward him forever--not that she plans on telling him why.
When a night of drinking games takes a terrifying turn, Ben and Beatriz are forced to put aside their dislike for each other to save someone's life. What follows--over the course of several months--is an unraveling, as both of them learn how wrong they've been about the other, and a rebuilding of something new and surprisingly tender. But does a country so bitterly divided have space for this kind of love story?