Praise for Going Bicoastal:
A July/August 2023 Kids Indie Next Pick!
A New York Public Library Best Book of the Year!
A Sydney Taylor Book Award Silver Medalist!
A Rainbow Book List Pick!
A YALSA Best Fiction for Young Adults Pick!
"Adler manages to make a tricky, high-concept premise look easy, grounding the stories in character and culture." - Booklist (starred review)
"A sweet and joyful romance times two." - Kirkus
"A fun and affirming story of a bisexual Jewish teen embraced and celebrated for both identities by her family and peers make this book a necessary purchase." - School Library Journal
"Adler’s enticing prose teems with a vibrancy born of intimately realized bicoastal settings and titillating romantic possibility." - Publishers Weekly
"Dahlia Adler is a name you need to know in queer YA...[Going Bicoastal] just as good as the stunning cover would suggest! This is the most bisexually structured book I've ever read." - Book Riot, "Our Queerest Shelves"
"This is [Dahlia Adler's] best book so far and one of my favorite books of the year." - Paste Magazine
"This is what it looks like when a brilliant high concept (bisexual Sliding Doors) is executed to perfection. It’s got all the Dahlia Adler trademarks―romance, wry humor, specificity, and genuine emotional depth." - Becky Albertalli, New York Times bestselling author of Kate in Waiting and Simon vs. The Homo Sapiens Agenda
Praise for Home Field Advantage:
"Adler’s magnificent new romance is a glorious touchdown of a book." - Buzzfeed
"This YA contemporary romance has not only a sweet sapphic love story but juicy narratives about football and cheerleading." - Autostraddle
"Bubbly cheerleader Amber McCloud falls for star quarterback Jaclyn “Jack” Walsh in Adler’s winning queer take on the classic meet-cute." - Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"A swoonworthy romance about breaking the glass ceiling and being true to yourself, Adler’s Home Field Advantage is a fun, queer twist on the quarterback/cheerleader trope that will suck you in from the very first page." - The Nerd Daily
“A combination of sizzling chemistry and heartfelt vulnerability makes the star-crossed romance between Amber and Jack irresistible. Home Field Advantage insists that women belong on the fieldas cheerleaders whose athleticism should receive the recognition it deserves and as players granted the same opportunities as their male peers. Teen readers will applaud Amber and Jack's fight to be their authentic selves.” - Shelf Awareness
"A bubbly LGBTQ romance that puts a fresh new twist on the age-old relationship trope of the high school football quarterback and the team cheer captain." - Paste Magazine
Praise for Cool for the Summer:
"Witty, wise, and disarmingly tender. I am hopelessly devoted to this summer dream of a book." - Becky Albertalli, New York Times bestselling author of Kate in Waiting and Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda
"[S]trung through with humor, warmth, and sensuality, this romance will speak to any reader who has ever struggled to know their own heart." - Booklist (starred review)
"Un-bi-lievably good." - Buzzfeed
"Dahlia Adler’s latest has me longing for the summer. This story of a bi girl discovering who she is and who holds her heart sounds like the perfect summer 2021 read." - Bookish
"There are so many more reasons to pick up this YA romance... Cool for the Summer is the perfect addition to your LGBTQ+ YA reading list." - Shondaland
"This book is a gamechanger for queer Jewish teens." - Alma
"A delightful, lighthearted romantic comedy." - The Seattle Times
"With its summery vibes and rollercoaster of queer confusion, Cool for the Summer is the sexy, sweet and steamy beach read of the year!" - The Nerd Daily
Narrator Mara Wilson is Jewish, bisexual, and bicoastal--just like the main character in this YA rom-com, Natalya Fox. Natalya must decide between a summer with her mom in Los Angeles, interning alongside a cute boy, or staying in New York with her dad and finally talking to the redheaded girl she's been crushing on. What if she does both? Chapters shift between these alternating choices to see how her summer would turn out in each scenario. Even though Wilson solidifies the characters' voices in the first chapter, the large cast and continual shifts in setting can still be disorienting for the listener. Nonetheless, Wilson matches the energy of a teen and maneuvers smoothly through the many Yiddish words and foods from various cultures. S.S. © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
Narrator Mara Wilson is Jewish, bisexual, and bicoastal--just like the main character in this YA rom-com, Natalya Fox. Natalya must decide between a summer with her mom in Los Angeles, interning alongside a cute boy, or staying in New York with her dad and finally talking to the redheaded girl she's been crushing on. What if she does both? Chapters shift between these alternating choices to see how her summer would turn out in each scenario. Even though Wilson solidifies the characters' voices in the first chapter, the large cast and continual shifts in setting can still be disorienting for the listener. Nonetheless, Wilson matches the energy of a teen and maneuvers smoothly through the many Yiddish words and foods from various cultures. S.S. © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
2023-03-14
Natalya Fox is ready for change but afraid of making the wrong decision; luckily she doesn’t have to choose in this parallel-timelines rom-com à la Sliding Doors.
Seventeen-year-old Natalya Fox has been given the choice of spending the summer at home with her father in New York City or moving in with her mother in Los Angeles. Manhattan is the safer option and would keep Natalya in her all-too-familiar comfort zone, but it does come with the possibility of romance with the girl Natalya has been crushing on for ages, known to her only as the Redhead due to Natalya’s inability to introduce herself. Los Angeles offers an internship and a chance to reconnect with her mother, and the other new intern, a boy her mom describes as cute, could be an unexpected perk. So Natalya makes her choice—and then she makes her other choice. Split between two parallel timelines, the novel shows readers Natalya falling in love, exploring her post-graduation plans, and finding new ways of connecting with her parents in both cities. Each of the timelines is exciting and heartwarming, although the Los Angeles love interest reads as more complex than the one back East, and the New York storyline lacks significant conflict, giving the West Coast one more depth overall. Bisexual Natalya is Jewish, and subjects such as keeping kosher, being queer and Jewish, and observing Shabbat are thoughtfully woven in.
A sweet and joyful romance times two. (Romance. 13-18)