Cursed boys and broken hearts

Adam Sass, 1983-

Book - 2024

Grant Rossi, an eighteen-year-old with a poor dating record due to a wish gone wrong, returns to his family's vineyard and B&B to help save it from disrepair, only to find himself working alongside his former friend and first love, Ben McKittrick.

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Viking 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Adam Sass, 1983- (author)
Physical Description
pages ; cm
Audience
Ages 14 and up.
Grades 10-12.
HL770L
ISBN
9780593464816
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

As a heartbroken, closeted 13-year-old, Grant Rossi wished his romantic woes away. Now 18, he knows that he cursed himself that night: he's destined to be dumped by every boy he dates. But when an impulsive visit to his family's vineyard turns into a summer spent striving to bring it back to its former glory, Grant finds himself working shoulder to shoulder with the very boy who inspired his ill-fated wish. A deep-seated penchant for drama, clinical depression, and an uncertainty about his post-summer plans make Grant a realistically messy teen who isn't always the easiest to root for but is incredibly relatable. Romance does not take center stage; the narrative instead focuses on Grant coming to terms with his past and hesitantly opening up to future possibilities. Accordingly, the conclusion is the delicate combination of realistic, hopeful, satisfying, and slightly open-ended that Sass (Your Lonely Nights Are Over, 2023) has demonstrably mastered. Come for the Wishing Rose, stay for the work-in-progress characters, and walk away assured that Grant's journey is just beginning.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Middle school friends reunite to save a moldering B&B in this energetic second-chance romance from Sass (Your Lonely Nights Are Over). Grant Rossi, 18, has always blamed his poor dating record on a mangled wish he made five years before on the wishing rose, the centerpiece of his Italian American family's vineyard and B&B. Fresh off a breakup with his influencer boyfriend, Grant impulsively speeds from Chicago to the exurb Valle upon his aunt Ro's request to help refurbish the vineyard from his youth, which is in disrepair; the end-of-summer Rose Festival is their only chance to raise enough money to forestall selling the establishment. He's thrown for a loop, however, when the summer gardener turns out to be Scottish American Ben McKittrick, 13-year-old Grant's true love who broke up his first relationship by kissing Grant's then-boyfriend. The teens agree to be civil, especially after Grant's carefully planned social media post drums up fresh business. But lingering unsupportive family dynamics, long-held hurt feelings, and the impending return of Ben to Scotland cast a long shadow in this clamorous romance, which Sass renders via high emotion and some lightly fantastical flourishes. Characters cue as white. Ages 14--up. Agent: Michael Bourret, Dystel, Goderich & Bourret. (July)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 10 Up--Recent high school graduate Grant Rossi is reeling from being dumped by his latest boyfriend. He believes that this is just another failed relationship brought on by a curse from a wish he made on the Wishing Rose at his family's vineyard. Once excited about going to design school and becoming a fashion designer, Grant's latest bout of depression has made it difficult for him to plan for his future. He decides to go to the vineyard in an attempt to help the struggling bed-and-breakfast that has been in his family for generations. When he arrives, he discovers his childhood best friend and reason for the wish, Ben, is working as the gardener on the property. Grant's struggles with depression and self-acceptance are not sugar-coated; he frequently uses the curse as an excuse for why his relationships end instead of working through his emotions and past traumas. Grant knows that he needs changes in his life but has to figure out what those changes need to be. Ben is Scottish, kind, and has his own life issues he must face, including the fallout from his friendship breakup with Grant. Grant's big Italian family is supportive but also has to come to terms with the roles they have played in Grant's depression and reactions to his coming out. VERDICT A LGBTQIA+ romance wrapped in wishes, self-discovery, and roses. Hand to older teens who like their romance with a healthy dose of angst.--Ashley Leffel

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Eighteen-year-olds Grant Rossi and Ben McKittrick tackle their complicated history and creative projects in this enemies-to-lovers romance. Fashion designer Grant is cursed: His relationships never last more than a month, and now he's going through another breakup. Steeped in depression, he escapes Chicago to help save his aunt's floundering bed-and-breakfast. Memories of familial grief, history, and lore come flooding back. At 13, Grant made a wish on his family's legendary rosebush--but that wish became a curse. Now he's back, trying to return the Vero Roseto Garden Inn & Vineyard to its former glory. The Rose Festival, a walking tour culminating with a stop at Vero Roseto, is just two months away, and the grounds are in tatters. Luckily, Aunt Ro hired a new gardener, who happens to be Ben, Grant's former best friend. The last time they saw each other, Grant made his ill-fated wish--and Ben stole his boyfriend. As they get into the weeds of their history of heartbreak and "he said, he said" drama, the narrative gets bogged down by backstory. Still, the chance of romance lingers throughout. Ben fixes up the grounds, while Grant designs a living sculpture garden for the Rose Festival. Despite the repetition in the plot, the painterly construction of the characters is a high point of this novel. Through a combination of therapy, medication, and personal accountability, Grant discovers a better way to live. Grant is Italian American; Ben is from Scotland. A sincere love story that patient readers will appreciate. (Romance. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 Invidioso I design fashion. I design art. I do not design chintzy two--for--one flyers for my aunt's failing B&B. Yet Mom still sent over the mockup of my aunt's upcoming ad so she could make use of my "design eye." But all I could see was a once--great destination spot offering massive discounts throughout their busiest season. That's all anyone else will see, too. Two--for--ones through the whole summer? Even during the Rose Festival in August? That festival is our crown jewel. Yet here my family is, admitting we can't even give these reservations away. On the off seasons, Vero Roseto's rose garden and vineyard are crushed by unforgiving Illinois winters---totally deserted except for the most desperate tourist. And thanks to climate change, spring doesn't exist anymore (vanished along with the visitors who used to seasonally escape to the vineyard). Summer is all Vero Roseto has---and summer is not enough to break even. "Ma, there's three exclamation points in this," I say, looking over the abysmal ad. "Aunt Ro's gotta cut it down to one or none." Over speakerphone, my mother grunts impatiently. "We just thought it was so drab without them! She wants people to know they're excited." "Every time she adds an exclamation point, her desperation goes up a font size." Mom snorts. "You got judgmental in the city." I don't blink. I just stare up at my nonmoving ceiling fan. My studio apartment is stifling in the early summer heat, but I don't have the willpower to switch on the fan. My clothes lie on my body as heavily as an X--ray vest. My ratty gray T--shirt is due for a wash, but at least I can't smell myself anymore. My nose has acclimated to the wretched sad boy fragrance that's currently strangling this airless room. Look at me. Two weeks out of graduating high school, and I'm already thriving. The city has done wonders for me. Truly, so grato about it. "Yep," I say tonelessly. "I got judgmental in the city. Judgmental and sad." Over the phone, Mom clicks her tongue--- my poor, pathetic son ---and says nothing. For long seconds, we stew in silence. I've done the thing I'm not supposed to do: mention my depression. She lets me talk about whatever I want, but the truth makes her quiet. It reminds her of the meds I used to take--and should get back to taking, once I make an appointment. It's nothing I'm embarrassed about, but she doesn't like thinking of me needing them, like I have a terrible infection she's doing her best to ignore, and I'm rudely reminding her of it. "Grant," she says, lowering her voice, "it's almost been a year. There's more than one boy in the world---" "I thought you called to talk about this crummy ad." Anger whips through my chest like a cobra. Guilt immediately follows, but I don't take it back. If I can't mention my sadness, she can't mention my ex. My heroic, romantic, sweetheart ex everyone fell in love with---his thousands of Instagram fans, my design program friends, and my family (who didn't even meet him before I was dumped). They adored him---that sweet bunny and his new bunny boyfriend (the best friend he fell in love with) who couldn't hurt a fly. Except they hurt me . But I don't count. I'm a beast, not a bunny. A beast with baggage and a curse on my head where no relationship lasts longer than a month. When my ex and I were dating, he and I were the golden couple. Then he fell in love with someone else, and I had to go. But where was the sweet, simple fairy tale his followers demanded? From their point of view, our broken fairy tale wasn't nuanced reality, it was just . . . my fault. But in reality, I'm a cursed boy, so where was this honestly gonna go anyway? So, the bunnies get to keep their little dewdrop love story while the beast remains shut away in his dungeon. Just like in those fairy tales my ex tricked me into believing in. "Back to the ad!" Mom says, fiddling with loud pots and pans. "Instead of exclamation points, what if we put some words in all caps?" "No," I moan. "Why not?" "Writing in caps is for millennials who are too online. Vetoed." "Well, we've gotta show enthusiasm somehow!" "We don't. Enthusiasm is desperate, and Ro's discount looks desperate enough. People come to Vero Roseto to feel classy, exclusive, like it's a club they can't get into. If Ro plays it cool in the ad, nobody will notice the place is in trouble." "Speaking from experience?" My heart screams, but I don't judge her too harshly. It's an Italian thing, gagging your kids like this, and I'm the youngest of eight, so she had lots of practice before she got to me. "Ouch, Ma." "Well, ouch, yourself. You just said our family's business is in trouble." "It is in trouble." "And so are you," she says firmly, but with extreme care. She's right, but I'm too empty to respond. Mosquito bites roar across my ankles, but I can't even find the energy to reach down and scratch them. Mom sighs. "Why don't you get away to the B&B? I can tell you aren't taking care of yourself, and Ro would die to have you over. Spend a few weeks. Get out of that city. She'll cook. She'll clean. And she gets a cool, artistic teen who'll tell her everything she's doing wrong with the business." Knowing she hasn't closed her hard sell yet, Mom laughs. "I'm giving you an open invitation for free food that doesn't come out of a microwave AND to criticize your family without back talk! How else can I sweeten this deal?" I clear my desert--dry throat. "I'm just busy. I can't get away." "Busy sleeping in past noon?" Mom's exhale blows out my phone speaker. "Okay, so you moved to the city, and some rich boy was careless with your heart. So what ? It's a tale as old as time. You're creative. Take all that crap he gave you and feed it into your work---" "I've done that---" "You're handsome! And tall---gays love that." I retch. "Okay, but how do you know that?" "There's other boys---" "I've tried ." "Enough! Grant, he wasn't that great---" Like I've been jabbed with adrenaline, I sit up in bed for the first time in hours. I can almost hear my body peeling off the mattress. "Ma!" I practically wail. "He wasn't a bad guy. He just didn't love me." Phlegm collects in my throat as my fourth cry of the day approaches. "What was he supposed to do? Stay with me forever just because I'm cursed?" "Piglet, no . . ." Mom's voice fills with fear. Hot tears build behind my eyes. I set my phone on my nightstand cluttered with empty pop cans and cartons of Easy Mac. After wiping my eyes dry, I hurl my top sheet onto the floor. "It's so hot in here!" "Well," Mom clears her throat, "the AC over at the B&B is freezing." "I'm not going to Vero Roseto, Ma." My head collides with my pillow as I pick up the phone again. "Sorry, but I don't think it would help me to be around something that's dying." There---that comment ought to scare Mom enough to leave me alone. We mutter goodbyes to each other, and I let my phone slip down my chest, where it settles somewhere beneath my ribs. With my last ounce of energy, I search around the carpet for The Bad Magazine, the one I hurt my feelings with when I get in these moods. It's a complimentary promotion for the Art Institute of Chicago's student design program---the show I worked on with my ex last year. The last thing we did together. We were the stars of the show, so a publicity photo from the event's red carpet entrance made the cover: me and him, the fairy--tale couple that was going to conquer the industry. When he left, he took my love for my work with him. That has to be why I'm still like this after a year. I'm just not me anymore. I'm something else now--- a beast . Or maybe this is the real me. Maybe the person I was with my ex was the fake. Months ago, during a spiral, I scratched out my face with a black pen. Traces of my smile---a silly, ignorant smile---appear around the edges of the scratch marks. I couldn't stand looking at myself that happy. It was a lie. Looking at this photo, it helps me remember---I'm cursed. My ex is just the latest of many who realized they were dating The Training Boyfriend before coming to their senses. My ex got his fairy--tale ending, but there's none of that for me. A low, scalding flame simmers beneath my heart knowing that even if I do find someone who wants me, it will be too late to get my pure, wholesome fairy tale. That chance is gone. Whoever this new boy will be, he'll have to deal with neediness, repressed anger, and---yes, Mom---desperation. He'll have to deal with the curse, something no boy has ever survived. Who would even have the patience? The time? The strength? Who could ever learn to love a beast? Excerpted from Cursed Boys and Broken Hearts by Adam Sass All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.