Review by Booklist Review
Leila Abid is smart, pretty, and in a job she loves. She is living in her parents' house as she figures out her life. On her twenty-sixth birthday, her parents surprise her with a stack of photos: possible future husbands for her. Although Leila does not consider her Indian Muslim parents to be conservative, they keep reminding her that she should be married by now. Initially bowing to their expectations, she agrees to their matchmaking, until a string of awkward encounters has her begging them for some time to find her own Bollywood love story. They give her three months, and then they will arrange her marriage. Leila's attempts are worse than her parents', and she has many hilariously bad dates. Though privileged, Leila starts out with an immature attitude, but after a family wedding in India, she begins to grow up and discover what she wants in life. Raheem's debut uses chick-lit tropes to smartly skewer modern ways of dating and to bring humor to more traditional South Asian ones. Recommended for all public-library collections.--Lynnanne Pearson Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A South Asian Muslim woman who grew up in Los Angeles has three months to find a husband before her parents plan to arrange a marriage for her.Leila Abid is the American-born daughter of Indian parents who have been happily married for almost 30 years. At 26, nondrinking Leila has been enjoying her quiet routinework, regular Tuesday night hangouts with her friendsand everything in her life has unfolded nicely. Even if she is still living with her parents. But when her parents announce that they will arrange her marriage because of her advanced age, she negotiates a three-month reprieve while she looks for a suitable Muslim man to marry who makes both her and her parents happy. She is not a traditional South Asian Muslim, and her American independence is not something she's willing to compromise on despite her interest in a grand Bollywood-esque love story, as she continually tells herself, her family, and her friends. Leila's thought processes as she grapples with who she is, who her parents are, and what it means to be a Muslim woman jostle for narrative attention in between a series of awkward and uncomfortable dates. The first half of the book is choppy and repetitive while Leila is in Los Angeles, but when she travels to India with her mother for a cousin's wedding, the story settles into itself and the lush heat, rich food, and sense of community that surrounds the three-day nuptials. Unfortunately, Leila's final decision packs little punch.Readers expecting a typical fairy-tale ending will be surprised. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.