Gr 10 Up—West Charleston High is the kingdom that Omar "T-Diddy" Smalls has won through his victorious battles on the gridiron as QB, including the state-championship game that helped seal his scholarship offer from the University of Miami. He has also won a great many female hearts and amassed quite a record of "bong-bong," loving and leaving about 20 young women to earn the label of "playa" that keeps Harvard-bound Claudia from even considering any kind of relationship with him, let alone a romantic one. All that starts to change when Omar decides to spearhead a school protest, suggested by Claudia, on massive cuts to arts programs like band and drama. Yes, he's making it up as he goes along, but he uses his near-celebrity status for a cause that matters and that's dear to the heart of a smart girl who looks like Beyoncé—one who won't have anything to do with him even after he has made a bet with his friends that he can bed her or at least bring them her panties. Both teens find change in love and purpose. Full of street slang and dialect as well as pages of Facebook posts and text conversations, this novel told in both Omar's and Claudia's voices will most likely appeal to reluctant readers who like plenty of innuendo and some graphic scenes in their urban teen "dramedy-romances."—
Suzanne Gordon, Lanier High School, Sugar Hill, GAClaudia Clarke--sharp, opinionated, and Harvard-bound--is the only girl who isn't impressed by quarterback Omar "T-Diddy" Smalls. Omar takes a bet that he can win Claudia over, and when his usual seduction tactics fail, he applies his social clout to Claudia's cause du jour. His burgeoning social awareness and transformation from carefree jock to true campus leader are satisfying and convincing.
After leading the team to a state championship, quarterback Omar “T-Diddy” Smalls has the West Charleston High student body eating out of his hand. Claudia Clarke—sharp, opinionated, and Harvard-bound—is the only girl in school who isn’t impressed; football frenzy distracts attention from budget cuts and teacher layoffs, and she finds T-Diddy’s macho antics immature at best. Omar takes a fifty-dollar bet that he can win Claudia over, and when his usual seduction tactics fail, he applies his social clout to Claudia’s cause du jour. Inspired by stories from the civil rights movement activists who hang around his uncle’s Library of Progress community center—and by his deepening feelings for Claudia—Omar rallies his classmates with clumsy but spirited speeches and organizes a sit-in. His burgeoning social awareness and subsequent transformation from carefree jock to true campus leader are satisfying and convincing, making Claudia’s thaw all the more believable. The wager, the opposites attracting, and the will-they-or-won’t-they courtship are familiar teen-comedy fare, but Claudia and Omar, with their entertaining and distinctive narrative voices, are a couple worth rooting for in this lighthearted, socially conscious romance. jessica tackett macdonald
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