What I Like About You
4/5
()
Friendship
Social Media
Communication
Identity
Family
Secret Identity
Friends to Lovers
Love Triangle
Coming of Age
Online Friendship
Fish Out of Water
Misunderstanding
Misunderstandings
Miscommunication
Opposites Attract
Family Relationships
Self-Discovery
Love
Relationships
High School
About this ebook
Can a love triangle have only two people in it? Online, it can…but in the real world, its more complicated. In this debut novel that’s perfect for fans of Jenny Han and Morgan Matson, Marisa Kanter hilariously and poignantly explores what happens when internet friends turn into IRL crushes.
Is it still a love triangle if there are only two people in it?
There are a million things that Halle Levitt likes about her online best friend, Nash.
He’s an incredibly talented graphic novelist. He loves books almost as much as she does. And she never has to deal with the awkwardness of seeing him in real life. They can talk about anything…
Except who she really is.
Because online, Halle isn’t Halle—she’s Kels, the enigmatically cool creator of One True Pastry, a YA book blog that pairs epic custom cupcakes with covers and reviews. Kels has everything Halle doesn’t: friends, a growing platform, tons of confidence, and Nash.
That is, until Halle arrives to spend senior year in Gramps’s small town and finds herself face-to-face with real, human, not-behind-a-screen Nash. Nash, who is somehow everywhere she goes—in her classes, at the bakery, even at synagogue.
Nash who has no idea she’s actually Kels.
If Halle tells him who she is, it will ruin the non-awkward magic of their digital friendship. Not telling him though, means it can never be anything more. Because while she starts to fall for Nash as Halle…he’s in love with Kels.
Marisa Kanter
Marisa Kanter is a young adult author, amateur baker, and reality television enthusiast. She is the author of What I Like About You, As If on Cue, and Finally Fitz. Born and raised in the suburbs of Boston, her obsession with books led her to New York City, where she worked in the publishing industry to help books find their perfect readers. She currently lives in Los Angeles, writing love stories by day and crocheting her wardrobe by night. Follow her at MarisaKanter.com.
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Reviews for What I Like About You
91 ratings3 reviews
What our readers think
Readers find this title to be a well-written, feel-good book that is hard not to love. However, some readers found the protagonist unlikable and felt that the ending was rushed and abrupt. Overall, the book is okay but predictable.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5The protagonist was not likable for most of the novel, and the ending was rushed and abrupt.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Predictable and cheesy but well written. It's definitely overly optimistic but it is such a feel good book it is hard not to love it.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The book was okay, but it was too predictable and I was able to guess what happens at the end very easily.
1 person found this helpful
Book preview
What I Like About You - Marisa Kanter
TWO
You’d think us Levitts would be minimalists.
I mean, we once moved six times in two years in the name of Gentrify, U.S.—a documentary that exposed the realities of gentrification in American cities. From nine to eleven, I lived in Brooklyn, Boston, Chicago, D.C., San Francisco, and Seattle.
By Chicago, I lived out of my suitcases. There was no point in pretending to settle.
With every move and every new doc, my parent promised it was the one. Gentrify, U.S. earned Mad and Ari Levitt their fifth Academy Award nomination.
It lost to a doc about chinchillas. Seriously.
I’m just saying. Considering how much of my childhood has been spent packing and unpacking and relocating, stuff should be a burden. I should live a cleansed, clutter-free life.
I don’t.
Exhibit A: the tornado of clothes still covering Aunt Liz’s floor. Or my floor now, I guess.
I stare at the mess I made. If I move the clothes from the floor to the bed, is that progress? Maybe instead I’ll purge everything that doesn’t spark joy. Honestly, I probably should’ve channeled Marie Kondo in Charlotte, before I challenged myself to fit my entire closet it one suitcase, just to see if I could.
I decide I can deal with the clothes later. First, my books need to breathe—in alphabetical order, by genre. I empty my suitcase one book at a time, organize, and shelve. Repetitive motion centers me, but I finish too soon. All my books fit on the white lacquered bookshelf next to the bed. It’s small—only two shelves. It’s kind of a tragedy, all the books I have fitting on only two shelves.
I would’ve had at least five more if my parents hadn’t made me donate a bunch to the library before we left. Incomplete fantasy series and old white dude literature I read for school now have a new home in the donation bin at the Charlotte Public Library. It’s never easy, saying goodbye to books. Especially ones that I have discussed and debated for years with my friends. Like, will Nash still be my best friend if he knows I donated the first two books in The Queen of Stone series? I’m not about to tell him and find out.
Still, it didn’t hurt so bad at the time, when I thought I’d have Grams’s collection to fall back on. But I don’t. And I’m afraid to ask Gramps what he did with them, because if he trashed them I don’t know what I’ll do.
I take a step back and assess my work. My bookshelf is small, but it is mighty. It’s a collection that consists of my three favorite things: swoony romcoms, twisted thrillers, and anything edited by Miriam Levitt, AKA Grams.
Fireflies and You is face out, of course. Signed, courtesy of being the granddaughter of the editor. It’s hands down the most priceless part of my collection.
Everyone on Book Twitter claims it’s impossible to pick a favorite book, but Fireflies and You is mine—no question. Beyond the beautiful story, it’s the book that made OTP. It’s the book that told me publicity is my path and showed me that I am in fact good at shouting about books—and making people listen. The one that helped me see I need to work in publishing.
And now it’s the book I reread to feel close to Grams.
I squeeze my eyes shut, fighting the pressure that builds behind my eyes. Fireflies and You is going to be a movie, so it’s been everywhere lately. It comes out in January and it’s the first Grams book to ever be adapted and she doesn’t even get to see it. She’ll never know—
Breathe.
Hal?
I twist to face the door, for one brief minute expecting Grams. Then Gramps’s head pokes in. I turn back around to wipe my tears, quick. Gramps cannot see me like this. I need to be positive. Enthusiastic. I asked to be here.
Gramps’s expression is neutral behind his too-long beard. If he saw me upset, he doesn’t show it. I’m sorry. The orange. I know you hate it. I meant to paint it. Before. I just—
I shake my head. It’s okay, Gramps. Orange is a crime to the color wheel, but I’ll live.
He nudges the door open enough to step in. "It is pretty bad."
I snort, grateful for this acknowledgement. It’s small, but it’s the first time since arriving that Gramps sounds like Gramps. "So bad."
You can repaint. Any color you want.
I’d like that. Thanks.
Gramps’s shoulders relax as he approaches Scout, who’s standing at the end of the bed, tail wagging. She blends in so well with the clothes when she’s curled up in a ball and sleeping, I honestly forgot she was here. Gramps scratches her ears and my brain is in overdrive, trying to figure out what to say next, what words to form when Gramps seems sort of okay, to broach the topic that’s the hardest.
Her books?
I blurt out.
Gramps flinches. Boxed up in the garage.
I nod. Can I—?
Gramps is gone before the question fully forms.
Of course, I said the wrong thing. I always say the wrong thing. It’s just—I needed to know. The absence of Grams’s bookshelves and the hundreds—no, thousands—of stories that lined them? It’s a tragedy.
I close my eyes and clutch Grams’s hamsa charm.
I open my eyes, exhale a shaky breath, and power on my laptop.
The screen comes to life, full brightness, and my pulse steadies as I type in my password. I can at least focus on the blog and checking to see if I got this cover reveal email, things that aren’t totally out of my hands. Except my inbox isn’t refreshing, and I notice my laptop is refusing to connect to Wi-Fi. Weird. It worked fine last summer, when we stayed in Middleton for three weeks. It should automatically connect, but of the six routers that appear, none are familiar.
I close my laptop and venture to ask Gramps. Also because I can only be surrounded by orange for so long. It’s too loud. Impossible to focus. Ollie’s already shut into Dad’s room, J. Cole blasting from his new speakers as I head down the stairs.
I park myself on the living room couch and open my laptop again. There’s so much to do, but connecting to Wi-Fi is priority number one. Tomorrow’s posts need to be edited; tweets need to be scheduled. Once all One True Pastry–related duties have been conquered, tonight is for organizing, sweatpants, Netflix with Ollie and hopefully Gramps, and catching up with my friends.
Hey, Gramps?
Huh?
he yells from the adjacent kitchen.
Did you get a new internet router?
I ask.
Nope!
I place my laptop down on the coffee table and peek my head into the kitchen. Gramps is sitting at the table, reading the newspaper and eating popcorn. Like a newspaper is popcorn-worthy entertainment.
Then where’s the old one?
I try to keep the panic out of my voice.
Gramps shrugs. My desktop is hardwired. So I didn’t need it anymore, you know?
I soften. Gramps.
He doesn’t look up from the newspaper and my heart shatters. Even Wi-Fi is triggering and everything about being here is suddenly too much. Why did I think this was a good idea? How can I possibly live in the house that has been stripped of every memory, of everything I love? Except Gramps. But even Gramps isn’t Gramps.
I know you kids need it for school,
Gramps says. It’s getting reinstalled next week.
I have some things I have to take care of, like, right now,
I say.
Translation: I need to get out of here now. I can’t be offline for a week. And I can’t run One True Pastry from my phone.
Then go to the library.
Gramps says, not even looking up.
And wow, his indifference? It hurts.
But I want to go. I need to go.
Okay. Well, I’ll be back before dinner.…
I run upstairs for my backpack. Then remember that I left my laptop in the living room, so I double back and shove it inside the sleeve, then tuck the sleeve inside the backpack. Zip backpack. Retie shoelaces. Yell up to Ollie that I’ll be with the books, which he’ll get if he even hears me. Get out of here.
I dash out the door, craving my Kels life like a drug.
Twenty minutes later, there’s still no Ariel Goldberg email, but I’m reconnected and feeling about a million percent better. I’m supposed to be writing a guest post for Teen Vogue. Instead, I’m assuring my friends that I am, in fact, not dead.
Amy Chen
i mean in all fairness what were we supposed to think?
3:34 PM
you went off the grid for SIX HOURS.
3:34 PM
Elle Carter
IN THE SUMMER. DURING NORMAL BUSINESS HOURS.
3:35 PM
Samira Lee
Really, Kels. You’d be just as worried if any of us vanished mid-convo with no explanation!!
3:36 PM
OMG
3:36 PM
the only thing that died was my phone
3:37 PM
Elle Carter
The first rule of internet friendship? Inform your comrades when your phone is on the brink of death
3:38 PM
Amy Chen
lol also we know you’ve been messaging Nash
3:39 PM
Amy Chen
he confirmed your semi-on the grid status two hours ago!
3:40 PM
Samira Lee
We see where your loyalty is!!
3:41 PM
3:42 PM
Amy Chen
lol you don’t even deny it anymore
3:43 PM
i’m sorry it’s been a day okay!!
3:44 PM
Amy Chen
whatever. i get it. you have to admit it to yourself before you can admit it to your besties. i’ll be here to say I TOLD U SO when you do.
3:45 PM
… what am I admitting?
3:45 PM
Elle Carter
Girl, you know.
3:45 PM
…
3:46 PM
My friends, along with the rest of the internet, love to act like something is going on between Nash and me. For the record, it’s not. Nash is the first person who left a comment on my blog, which led to me discovering REX, which resulted in our first DMs. He’s the first real friend I ever had. My best friend.
Amy, Elle, and Samira’s jokes cut closer to home though because they’re friends with Nash too. Book Twitter is already a bubble. Teen Book Twitter? It’s such a niche subsection of the Twitterverse—pretty much everyone knows everyone. Or at least, knows of everyone.
Samira Lee
*an extremely natural segue*
Brooklyn wants to know how moving went, Kels?
3:50 PM
Samira sends us a string of portrait-mode photos of Brooklyn, her perfect queen of a cat. I save them to my camera roll, because Brooklyn photos make the best memes. On Twitter, she’s a star.
ok. i’m used to it, you know?
3:45 PM
it’s not really a big deal anymore
3:46 PM
My friends think I’m an army brat. It explains why I move around so much. If I told them the real reason, it would get complicated. And the best thing about being Kels is how uncomplicated she is. She bakes cupcakes inspired by book covers, reviews YA books, and always knows exactly what to say. She never thought-spirals or blurts out the wrong thing at the wrong time. She makes a religion out of the backspace key. She doesn’t have Halle’s Academy Award–nominated parents or a publishing royalty grandmother to live up to.
And she has actual friends. Even though we’ve never met, they aren’t just pixels to me. Amy, Elle, and Samira are the people I talk to every day—whether about the latest drama on Book Twitter, the disappointment in an ARC I was so excited for, or asking their opinions on which photo to use for the next cupcake Instagram post. Even though they don’t know my real name, they know me better than anyone. Well, except Nash.
Amy Chen
not a big deal! i cried for a week when i moved into my dorm.
3:47 PM
Amy Chen
i’m still crying because i’m going to be paying off student loans until i’m 40.
3:47 PM
Elle Carter
Wait! Didn’t you settle on UT Austin to SAVE money?
3:47 PM
Amy Chen
yup!! college is a scam!! if more sponsorships came through i’d honestly consider booktubing full time
3:48 PM
omg so then I could say I’m friends with a NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING author /and/ a CAREER YOUTUBER???
3:49 PM
Elle Carter
omg stop it I’m blushing!
3:49 PM
Amy Chen
pray to the gods of monetization for me please!!
3:49 PM
Samira Lee
3:49 PM
Elle Carter
3:49 PM
3:49 PM
Samira Lee
Also. Hold up. Elle. You let Kels read
IT’LL NEVER BE YOU????
3:50 PM
SHE DID AND IT’S AMAZING
3:51 PM
Elle Carter
You think anything pitched as hate-to-love
is amazing, Kels
3:52 PM
BECAUSE IT IS
3:52 PM
Samira Lee
BECAUSE IT IS
3:52 PM
Elle Carter
Well. Thank you. It actually might not be trash? Lilah thinks we can go on sub next month.
I send a string of screaming emojis, then thank Samira for the super-casual segue in our private chat. Amy and Elle frequently spiral into a Kels + Nash = Endless Hearts rabbit hole. It’s pretty cringe-y, but at least Samira is always on my side.
Samira Lee
Totally natural segues are my specialty. See.
3:54 PM
My phone blows up again with twelve new pictures of Brooklyn.
Back in the group chat, the subject shifts.
Samira Lee
Wait. Kels. Have you heard from AG’s people?
4:01 PM
not yet!
4:02 PM
i’m stressed!!
4:03 PM
Elle Carter
Don’t stress! It’s PUBLISHING. So like. Expecting a response today most definitely means you won’t get one until next week.
4:03 PM
Elle is probably right, but I can’t focus on blog content now anyway, so I let my eyes wander to the shelves around me. I have a prime window seat in the YA section, which I finally found after climbing up a winding staircase and through a narrow corridor. I’ve been here a handful of times, only on the off chance that Grams didn’t have a book I was looking for, but the YA section is somehow smaller than I remember. Then again, it’s a small library. My eye lands on the first two books in a new epic fantasy series that Amy recommended to me, so I get up to grab them. Then I pause at the NEW AND NOTEWORTHY endcap, stalling. I know I should check these out and go home, but I’m not ready to go back to that house and face Gramps.
I sit down instead and refresh my email while the group chain fires away in the background. Still nothing.
Well, if I’m not leaving, maybe I can at least be somewhat productive, with the promise of two new books to read as a reward. I minimize the group chat and reopen the article for Teen Vogue. It’s not due until next week, but I’m hoping to get a draft prepared before school starts. It’s a feature on Jewish YA—listing all my favorite books with Jewish protagonists, written by Jewish authors.
Ariel Goldberg is of course at the top of the list. Her twisty psychological thrillers star Jewish teens and her debut was the first time I felt seen in genre fiction. I want this article to help others feel that way too.
I put on headphones, play my #amwriting playlist on Spotify—a perfect combination of soft rock and acoustic covers—and find my rhythm in blurbing each book I’ve selected for the listicle.
Hey. Mind if I sit here?
I barely notice the voice, but I do register the tall shadow standing above me.
Go for it,
I say, not breaking eye contact with my screen. I can’t lose my flow now.
It’s my first Teen Vogue piece, but I’m planning to pitch a monthly column to an editor I’m a Twitter mutual with. All posts would include a link to One True Pastry, which would be huge. I’m currently being hyped as their teen contributor, so I feel like there’s a decent shot. I’m aware that my teen factor has an expiration date, but for now? I totally embrace it. Let me be a teen voice on any and all major media platforms! I’ll never say no. I built One True Pastry on being for teens, by a teen.
Because engaging with adults who think YA is for them? It’s exhausting.
Twenty minutes later, I click save draft.
It’s not exactly what I needed to do today, but after twelve hours in the car and narrowly avoiding a panic attack, it’s something.
My laptop dings with a new email notification—and my chest tightens for the millionth time today.
I glance at the clock.
It’s four thirty-two. Almost the end of the workday. Unlikely.
But possible.
I exhale and click the Inbox (1)
tab.
Subject: READ BETWEEN THE LIES Cover Reveal
Oh God.
It’s a rejection.
I feel it in my bones.
My cursor hovers over the email. It might seem small, waiting for a cover reveal, but it’s everything. Ariel Goldberg hasn’t released a new book in three years. In publishing, where so many popular authors are on a book-a-year schedule, this feels like a lifetime. Hosting a highly anticipated cover reveal like this one? One that should probably go to a major media outlet? It’s exactly what One True Pastry needs to keep the momentum, to rise above the everyone-has-one kind of blogs out there, to be noticed by industry professionals and impress NYU admissions.
Now that the email is here in front of me though, and I have the power to click … I almost don’t want to know. I thought no email was worse than a rejection. I take it back. Why did I ever think I wanted something in writing telling me I’m not good enough?
I wait a full minute, then click on the email before I change my mind.
Hi Kels!
I’m Alyssa Peterson, Ariel Goldberg’s publicist. I’m so excited to confirm that Ariel would LOVE for One True Pastry to host the exclusive cover reveal for Read Between the Lies.
I reread confirm and love twelve times before I am convinced that’s really what it says.
I got the Ariel Goldberg cover reveal. Me, Kels from One True Pastry.
Oh my God.
I slam my computer shut.
The sound reverberates through the silence.
Sorry, I mouth to the person sharing my table, trying to contain the stupid smile that must be spreading across my face. I make eye contact with him and for the second time in literally thirty seconds, I don’t believe what I’m seeing. I blink once.
I’m hallucinating. It’s the only logical explanation.
Good news?
he asks—but really, he’s trying not to laugh.
You could say that,
I say.
How am I speaking? How am I breathing?
He isn’t a hallucination.
I know him.
Well, I, Halle, don’t know him.
Kels knows him.
In fact, he’s kind of Kels’s best friend.
July, the summer before Middleton
BookCon @thebookcon 1hr
Calling all bloggers! Do you want to be a voice at one of publishing’s biggest events? For the first time, we’re opening applications for a blogger-only panel, aptly called Bloggers IRL! Applications are due September 1.
Apply here: https://bit.ly/2IX3iAs
|
Nash Stevens @Nash_Stevens27 1hr
@thebookcon @OneTruePastry
Direct messages
Nash Stevens
Heeeeey! Did you see that BookCon is having a blogger panel at next year’s conference?
2:27 PM
Dumb question. I tagged you. You saw it.
2:27 PM
So. Proposal. I think we should apply for it.
2:28 PM
hahaha okay sure
2:29 PM
Kels. I’m serious.
2:30 PM
you are? come on. CALLING ALL BLOGGERS is code for famous, influential bloggers. the people who write think pieces for national publications, but actually know nothing about YA or the blogging community.
2:32 PM
Wow. Harsh.
2:32 PM
You need to give yourself more credit sometimes, you know? Don’t you have like … 100K Instagram followers?
2:33 PM
110.2K
2:34 PM
SEE. I think you’re probably exactly what BookCon is looking for.
2:35 PM
only my cupcakes are viral. my actual blog stats are still pretty mid-level. i don’t know.
2:37 PM
Well, I think we should give it a shot. What do we have to lose?
3:00 PM
our dignity when the BookCon
committee laughs at us
3:01 PM
… You are so dramatic.
3:02 PM
okay. i thought about it. let’s give it a shot, why not. on the miniscule chance this works, we’re definitely getting into NYU with this on our application.
4:34 PM
That’s a valid point.
4:35 PM
We’d also meet. Like. In person.
4:35 PM
really? that thought did not cross my mind,
not once
4:36 PM
Ha?
4:37 PM
don’t you ever worry it’ll be weird? meeting?
4:37 PM
Sometimes I guess, but I think we should let the BookCon gods decide. Because like … if we both manage to somehow get onto this thing?
4:38 PM
I’m pretty sure that means we’re supposed to meet.
4:39 PM
THREE
If words weren’t the absolute worst, I’d say, Nash, It’s me.
I don’t know how to explain it so it makes sense. Nash. It’s me, Kels. We were just talking about how I’ve never seen Lord of the Rings and oh, by the way, I got the cover reveal! I’m Kels—except I’m not Kels, I’m Halle. But … you can call me Kels. Though everyone else will probably call me Halle, so that could get weird. But yeah! Wow! Hi!
It would be a catastrophe. I would be a catastrophe.
He’s so boyish in person. Without the thick black hipster glasses he wears in his Twitter picture, he looks younger. His dark hair is longer, too, falling into his eyes. His eyes. I knew they were brown, but they also have specks of gold—I had no idea. I don’t think I’ve ever thought of him as a height, but he’s tall and all limbs. I mean, Kels knows he runs track. But now I see it, you know? I see how all the pieces fit together and become Nash IRL.
I’m Nash.
His voice is a melody I never imagined I’d hear. And I almost don’t understand why he’s introducing himself, but of course he has no clue who I am. Why would he? My current picture is an artsy photograph of the back of my head, my hair long and blowing in the wind. My face is always obscured in posts. It helps to mold my persona, a version of me that is cooler and more mysterious than I am in real life.
I’m Kels. That’s what I should say.
Halle
is what comes out.
It’s the truth, but it feels like a lie.
Cool.
He smiles, and my God, it’s so much better than the smiley-face emoji. Are you just visiting?
I shake my head no because words are stuck in my throat.
Wait—
Oh, thank God. I don’t have to tell him. He knows.
—you’re Professor Levitt’s granddaughter, right?
Professor Levitt? Nash knows Gramps? My Gramps. What?
"It’s not weird that I know that, I swear. I’m in his art history class. First class was supposed to be tonight, but he postponed it. Said his grandchildren were moving in. We don’t get too many new people in Middleton, so I kind of put two and two