How Maya Got Fierce
By (Author) Sona Charaipotra
Feiwel and Friends
Feiwel and Friends
8th November 2022
United States
Young Adult
Fiction
813.6
Hardback
288
Width 147mm, Height 217mm, Spine 30mm
362g
She may be a farm girl, but seventeen-year-old Maya's vision board is all about fashion and Fierce-the women's magazine she's been reading since she was ten. As the daughter of Punjabi garlic farmers, it's off to cow camp for the summer. But when she gets to the east coast, she learns that her cousin's girlfriend works at Fierce-and realizes that her wildest dreams might just be in reach. She's up for an internship, but taking it would mean leaving her parents' plans behind. One other (major) glitch: her bosses at Fierce think she's 26, and hire her as the assistant editor, not an intern. Maya is so close to making her dreams come true, and when she suggests the perfect candidate for a big story-and manages to get the scoop-all eyes are on her. How long can she keep her real age from her boss-and her real life from her parents
Praise for Symptoms of a Heartbreak:
A rom-com with heart. --People
Thought-provoking. --Entertainment Weekly
Fans of YA contemporary don't want to miss this one. --Buzzfeed
A rich, multi-layered story. --NPR
Smart, tender and thoughtful.
--Nicola Yoon, #1 New York Times-bestselling author of The Sun Is Also a Star
Kept me glued to the edge of my seat from the first page to the last.
--Sandhya Menon, New York Times-bestselling author of When Dimple Met Rishi
Readers will fall in love with Girl Genius Saira, who is fierce, brilliant, flawed, and utterly relatable.
--Samira Ahmed, New York Times-bestselling author of Love, Hate & Other Filters and Internment
Pitch-perfect rom-com...absolutely unputdownable.
--Julie Murphy, #1 New York Times-bestselling author of Dumplin'
Sona Charaipotra has worked as a celebrity reporter at People and TeenPeople and contributed to publications ranging from the New York Times to TeenVogue. She uses her master's in screenwriting from NYU and her MFA in creative writing from the New School to poke plot holes in her favorite teen TV shows-for work, of course. She is the cofounder of CAKE Literary, a boutique book packaging company with a decidedly diverse bent, the coauthor of the YA dance dramas Tiny Pretty Things and Shiny Broken Pieces, as well as the psychological thriller The Rumor Game, and the author of Symptoms of a Heartbreak. She is a proud We Need Diverse Books team member. Find her online at sonacharaipotra.com.