The Donut Trap by Julie Tieu, November 9, 2021, Avon, library book
Genres: romantic comedy, YA, contemporary fiction, immigrant fiction, multicultural interest
Book beginning:
All of my customers have told me at one point or another that Sunshine Donuts is their happy place. Who can blame them? There are colorful sprinkled donuts.... To live and breathe it every day, that's a different story.
Page 56:
His lightly tanned skin was so perfectly even and smooth, with tiny freckles under his left eye.
Book review:
As the title suggests, Jasmine finds herself trapped in her parents' donut shop after recently graduating from college. Her feelings of obligation to her immigrant Chinese-Cambodian parents keep her at home, knowing they need help, even though they encourage her to find a job.
In love, dating, marriage, family obligations, career, Jas weighs what she wants for herself and what her parents expect from her. When her current crush, Alex, and his mother come to dinner at her parents' house, the evening ends in a minor disaster, Alex is no longer welcome, and Jas is in conflict.
But Jas is determined to live her own life and to also help her parents update their store's donut offerings to keep up with the competition, hire additional help, and leave her free to find her own path.
A contemporary novel of young adults - Jas and her brother Pat- finding their own way while appreciating and loving their families, I gave this five stars for being spot on re this topic.
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