Click the image to view the item in the catalog.

Lara Jean writes love letters to all the boys she has loved and then hides them in a hatbox until one day those letters are accidentally sent

Sent from New York City to Seoul to be with her father, Melody discovers the alluring aspect of living in Korea with the help of her newfound friends but soon learns that her shiny new life comes with a high price.

Creating an art exhibit out of teenagers’ break-up boxes, including her own, which leads to a creative partnership and new friendship, Chloe Chang learns valuable lessons about what love can be.

Determined to make her crush Jonathan Slate fall for her, Payal Mehta convinces her archnemesis, Philip Kim, to help, but as she lies to the people she loves, hides the too-Indian parts and learns that maybe Philip isn’t the worst, she begins to question her feelings and her sanity.

Instead of going to prom, Elena Soo wants to spend her time saving the local community center, and she is determined to keep her priorities straight even when her childhood best friend, who is now a K-pop superstar returns to make good on their old pact to go to prom together.

When Emma wishes for proof that love is real, she starts receiving letters from her true love in the future and attempts to uncover the identity of the sender in the past.

Discovering a mix-up due to their shared Korean name, interns Elijah Ri and Jessica Lee decide to stay switched so Elijah can escape his controlling father while Jessica secures college recommendations, but the one thing they didn’t count on was falling in love.

When Eliza Lin’s entirely fictional essay about meeting her perfect boyfriend goes viral at her international school in Beijing, she has to make a deal with the handsome and charming Caz Song to play the part. But when the relationship starts to feel real all her career plans are suddenly threatened.

Jenny never had much time for boys, K-pop, or really anything besides her dream of being a professional cellist. But when she finds herself falling for a K-pop idol, she has to decide whether their love is worth the risk.

Michael, to whom Liz Buxbaum gave her heart long ago, has returned but to get his attention and perhaps, a prom date, she must scheme with her nemesis Wes, her next-door neighbor.

When influencer Elena Ok’s family loses its fast-fashion fortune and flees to rural California, she is forced to confront her family’s dynamics, and when she begins helping local vendors at the Blaire Fair, she starts to rethink her definition of success.

Bibi Hossain’s summer plans for romance take an unexpected turn when her sister gets engaged, sending her to Bangladesh for the wedding, where she experiences major culture shock and a possible romance with the groom’s younger brother.

Adopted Taiwanese American Catie Carlson yearns to understand more about her culture and biological mother and offers to teach a co-worker how to date in exchange for learning Mandarin, in a story about grief, family and following one’s heart.

“How have you gotten out of your comfort zone?” That’s the Stanford admissions prompt that valedictorian shoo-in Aisha Agarwal can’t answer. So, when her crush, Brian, asks her to winter formal, Aisha thinks her fate is changing… until Brian stands her up. As if on cue, a banged-up Volkswagen arrives outside the dance; the driver, a guy her age, profusely apologizing for being late to pick her up. Does Aisha know him or what he’s talking about? No. Does the Stanford essay convince her to take him up on the ride? Absolutely.

River Langston-Lee dumps his girlfriend, quits his job at his parents’ cafe and gets a job at a failing Korean cafe working with grumpy goth Sarang Cho, in an enemies-to-lovers coffee shop romance.