As a way to let students finsib the school without hating anyone, the Fritzerberg highschool created a rule which says that ," after 2 weeks of begging their senior years, each student should group up with the pupil he hates the most, for one semester. If the teachers were sure that the student doesn't anymore hate his friend, his mission will be accomplished, but if not, extreme measures shall be brought on both of them."
Andre, an ordinary boy, can't stand a girl whose name is Anwar, not because of the way she talks neither because of how she looks but there's something up there on her head that frustrates him. Likewise, Anwar can't stand Andre because, simply, he's always picking on her, or in other words, she's being bullied by him.
So, what happens when both students are grouped together for 3 months? Will they be able to understand each other's opinion, or will the "extreme measures" be brought on them?
WATTPAD BOOKS EDITION
Can she be herself in a one-size-fits-all world?
Lori Palmer is the new girl at Bay Water High, where students prize glossy hair, beach bodies, and school spirit above all else. She misses her old school―where her talent as an artist carried more weight than she does―and longs for her old family life, before her parents got divorced and her mom reinvented herself.
So Lori decides that the only way to survive the rest of the year is to blend into the background, but her plans go awry when she discovers that the most popular (and hottest) guy at Bay Water High, Jake, is a volunteer at her brother's school. When her brother befriends Jake's sister, Lori is suddenly thrust into his unfamiliar and exhilarating world of water polo, parties, and stargazing.
But with her relationship with her mother deteriorating, old anxieties resurface and Lori finds a new artistic release that unknowingly ignites a powerful movement. When the authorities start asking questions, Lori realizes that finding her voice might have gotten her into a world of trouble...but sometimes standing up for what you believe in is as important as standing up for yourself.