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Don't Date Rosa Santos

von Nina Moreno

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Rosa Santos, a Cuban American, works to save her Florida town, seeks admittance to study abroad in her homeland, and wonders if love can break her family's curse. Rosa Santos is cursed by the sea-at least, that's what they say. Dating her is bad news, especially if you're a boy with a boat. But Rosa feels more caught than cursed. Caught between cultures and choices. Between her abuela, a beloved healer and pillar of their community, and her mother, an artist who crashes in and out of her life like a hurricane. Between Port Coral, the quirky South Florida town they call home, and Cuba, the island her abuela refuses to talk about. As her college decision looms, Rosa collides -- literally -- with Alex Aquino, the mysterious boy with tattoos of the ocean whose family owns the marina. With her heart, her family, and her future on the line, can Rosa break a curse and find her place beyond the horizon?… (mehr)
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A lovely blend of realism and modernity with believable magic and superstition. It leaves you with a wholesome feeling, optimistic despite it all.
See the full review and more at mybookjoy.com!

Recommended: sure
For a blend of modern concerns and cultural influences, for a style of magic that might make you question your own beliefs, for perfectly timed jokes and references wound with community ties that go deep

Thoughts:
It took me a while to get through this. It also took me a while to like Rosa. The "saving the town" premise felt far too easy towards the start, and even by the end it felt like more of a footnote, a carry objective to learn about the characters. The writing kept me reading though, as the language is absolutely gorgeous, with startlingly powerful imagery and lines that you have to re-read a few times to savor.

There were definitely some laughs in here, as well. The reference to Pitbull from the veijos caught me off guard and totally cracked me up! The deeper exploration of identity builds towards the end, and that's what I found myself most interested in. Rosa's conflict over her family history and her unknown Cuban roots weave into every aspect of her life. Her attempted romance with a sailor is not the star of the story, but rather a well constructed foil to learn more about Rosa. I was surprised but impressed by that decision; romance typically gets shoved between the lines of a book, whether it's beneficial or not to the story overall.

The magic was such that I could accept it. It felt perfectly reasonable to imagine these charms and incantations working; that Rosa's mother truly did drag a storm with her wherever she went. This grows from a story about a girl trying to get a boyfriend and decide on a college, to a story of multiple generations and the way their shared grief affects each of them differently. The ending was absolutely perfect, and I'm grateful I got to taste it. ( )
  Jenniferforjoy | Jan 29, 2024 |
I need to be more careful about when I read books. I haven't been on a boat in months so of course I wait until I'm on a 30 hour voyage to open the book about lovers lost at sea.
I'm still confused about how he made it to Cuba at the end, but the romance in this was a scintillatingly good amount. I really enjoyed the way that they embraced the dilemma over college, and the dilemma about what one's heritage means and how it changes and grows as families change. This was good fun! ( )
  whakaora | Mar 5, 2023 |
"The lullaby of my life is that to know the sea is to know love, but to love us is to lose everything. We're cursed, they still whisper, but by an island, the sea, or our own stubborn hearts, I don't know."

Thank you to NetGalley and Disney-Hyperion for providing me with an e-ARC in exchange for an honest review!

**Content Warning: Death, family member's death are brought up often.**

This was such a sweet and beautifully written book! I completely fell in love with Port Coral and it's tight knit community. It had so many general Florida references and it was so fun to read them, the town of Port Coral just felt so real. I may have also screamed a bit when the area I currently live in, and the university I went to, were mentioned.

I adored Rosa so so much, the second she started going on about her bullet journal I was just sold on her. The dedication she has for meeting goals was fantastic, no matter the issue she's there helping out and planning a path for success. Now Rosa and Alex absolutely killed me with every interaction they had, it was so cute!!

Rosa's relationship with the women in her family is very complicated, but despite all their differences and misunderstandings I was glad there was always that emphasis on just how much these women love each other. Mimi was such a cool and wise grandmother, she definitely made me miss my own grandmother a lot. I loved how her extensive knowledge of medicinal plants was a huge part in helping their local community. How everyone could just go to her and she would have a solution for their problems. Also Mimi's garden room is the stuff of my dreams!!!

Now when I heard about the curse I wasn't sure what to expect for that. I enjoyed the way the family curse was shown to have such a strong grip on so much of their lives. This was a serious issue for them, and I'm glad it was never downplayed. Now I also appreciate how the subject of brujería was handled so beautifully. How it was just a very normal part of Rosa's life, and doing it came so naturally to her. I loved how casually she could bring it up with her friends or others within the community, and how it was never seen in a negative light.

Overall this is such a beautiful book about family and finding yourself. Rosa takes you on such a huge adventure, and I loved every single moment.
( )
  JanaviS | Apr 19, 2021 |
Here's an own-voices Latinx romance that any one with a migrant culture will identify with:

"I was a collection of hyphens and bilingual words. Always caught between. Two languages. Two schools. Two countries. Never quite right or enough for either. My dreams were funded by a loan made long before me, and I paid it back in guilt and success. I paid it back by tending a garden whose roots I could not reach."

Rosa Santos, granddaughter of a Cuban refugee whose family is deemed to be cursed around water (her father and grandfather having died at sea), is determined to uncover her Cuban heritage. So when her Florida town of Port Coral is threatened by development, she's all over the plan to raise money through a Latin-themed Spring festival. Although the novel opens on Rosa's relationship to Cuba, it's this festival which holds the story together, linking a diverse cast of small town neighbours and bringing together subplots such as Jonas and Clara's wedding, Abuela's healing powers and Rosa's romance.

There's a lot in here apart from the romance - an artist mother who works away from home and arrives or disappears without warning, online learning at the local community college where Rosa has completed first and second year uni courses alongside her high school course, her part time job at the local bodega, and her ongoing relationship with the sea after she meets Alex, whose family owns the local marina. While, I'd have liked to see the ending fleshed out - it felt incredibly rushed to me - this was an enjoyable romance. I especially like the fact that the story didn't revolve around Rosa's love interest as many teen romances are wont to do.

This is a simply written story that flows easily between the multifarious aspects of Rosa's life. Only the key characters (Rosa, her mother, her greandmother nad her love interest) are fleshed out, which could be considered a flaw, if it weren't a representation of the fact that Latinx culture is so very much all about family. The judicious use of Spanish words and phrases (in contexts that render them comprehensible by non-Spanish speakers) immerses the reader in Rosa's world, and it is impossible not to fall in love with her abuela, Mimi.

Highly recommended for migrant kids and for anyone who enjoys teen romance. ( )
  IsabellaLucia | Dec 14, 2020 |
Actual Rating: 4.25 stars

This book is deceptive but in the best way. You go into it thinking it’s going to be a sweet, lighthearted love story about a girl cursed by the sea meeting a boy who feels at home on it. And that is what you get. But you also get a view of what it’s like to be trapped between multiple cultures and how hard it can be to make either side happy. And about learning who you are outside of the grief that has shaped your entire life. This book cracked my heart in two and made me cry like a fool - I absolutely recommend it to everyone.

But - the climax of the book felt like it came out of nowhere. It didn’t even feel like it matched the tone of the first part of the book, and it made the feeling of emotional whiplash even worse. The ending saved the book for me, and brought it back a little closer to what it had been but dang. ( )
  zombiibean | Nov 20, 2020 |
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For Dad

Imagining you reading this was part of the dream.
But we build new ones. You taught me that.
This story was always yours, and when I see you again
I'll tell you all about it.
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The Santos women never go to the sea.
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Rosa Santos, a Cuban American, works to save her Florida town, seeks admittance to study abroad in her homeland, and wonders if love can break her family's curse. Rosa Santos is cursed by the sea-at least, that's what they say. Dating her is bad news, especially if you're a boy with a boat. But Rosa feels more caught than cursed. Caught between cultures and choices. Between her abuela, a beloved healer and pillar of their community, and her mother, an artist who crashes in and out of her life like a hurricane. Between Port Coral, the quirky South Florida town they call home, and Cuba, the island her abuela refuses to talk about. As her college decision looms, Rosa collides -- literally -- with Alex Aquino, the mysterious boy with tattoos of the ocean whose family owns the marina. With her heart, her family, and her future on the line, can Rosa break a curse and find her place beyond the horizon?

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