Fake It Till You Break It

By Jenn P. Nguyen

Preye Iwowari

Reviewed on Mar 8, 2022

Loved it! šŸ˜

This is a wonderful execution of the childhood-friends-to-lovers trope plus the enemies-to-lovers trope.

This was yet another excellent young-adult book with the fake relationship trope. Complete with the short-term pining, oblivious characters, and scheming overly-enthusiastic third-parties, this was an absolute delight to read. Needless to say, fake-dating or the fake relationship trope is superior in my books, so itā€™s pretty hard to mess it up. Iā€™m biased like that and I advise you proceed with that in mind.


The relationship between the male and female lead was very cute. They had been shoved together right from childhood by their mothersā€”whom may probably go down as the most meddlesome parental figures in fiction ever. From birthday parties, to customary Sunday dinners, they were constants in each otherā€™s lives. Their mothers held out hope that their affection for each other would be evident if they were in close proximity for a long time.


Mia, the female protagonist, reached her boiling point when her mother, once again, botched an attempt to flirt with a waiter by insinuating that she and Jake, the male protagonist, were in a relationship. Tired of their mothersā€™ antics, they hatched the plan to date and then break-up, forever cementing their incompatibility in their parentsā€™ eyes.


Of course, they fell in love quick and privately wrestled with their new-found feelings. I canā€™t imagine how chaotic it would be to wake up one morning to discover that the hate youā€™ve supposedly festered for years isnā€™t actually hate at all. Epic.


I liked how interconnected their lives were. This isnā€™t me supporting or romanticizing codependencyā€”far from that, as a matter of fact. They cultivated so many endearing habits over the years, and complemented each other in all the ways that mattered. The inside jokes, eating habits, and other tidbits of knowledge about the other person made this so romantic to read.


I particularly enjoyed how easy their relationship became when they finally gave in to their feelings. The transition was super easy because of their background, and, although itā€™s quite easy to look on the surface and dismiss their relationship because of how different they seemed, on closer inspection, itā€™s evident why they fell in love with each other.


That said, I really enjoyed this book. It has Asian rep, and although the book doesnā€™t delve too much into their racial identities and their place in community as a result of their race, itā€™s evident how much they try to incorporate their heritage into their daily lives.


It almost seems like Iā€™m rambling, but I didnā€™t think I would enjoy this book as much as I did. The writing was fluid and soft, with the sentences flowing into each other. This made for a very smooth reading experience.

Although I would have appreciated a bit more depth to the characters, Iā€™m aware of character limits and feel this was properly executed.

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I have been reading since I was old enough to hold a book and, in my opinion, the only thing marginally better than immersing myself in one fictional world or the other is sharing my love of literature with members of the reading community.

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