So many college romances lately feel like they’re set on a generic, white-washed campus. A book that truly stood out for me was 'You Had Me at Hola' by Alexis Daria—wait, that's not college, sorry, my brain is scrambled from all the reading. I meant 'Never Have I Ever' by Isabel Yap. Actually, scratch that, I'm thinking of the show. Okay, the one I keep recommending is 'Hani and Ishu’s Guide to Fake Dating' by Adiba Jaigirdar. It’s set in a sixth form, which is basically pre-college in the UK system, but the cultural themes around being Bengali and Bangladeshi, plus navigating queer identity in a conservative community, felt incredibly real and specific.
Another recent favorite is 'The Love Match' by Priyanka Taslim, though that leans more toward post-high school. For a solidly college-set story, 'Made in Korea' by Sarah Suk has rival student entrepreneurs, which brings in Korean cultural dynamics and family expectations in a really fun way. I also found 'The Chandler Legacies' by Abdi Nazemian surprisingly layered—it’s more ensemble drama with romance threads, but the exploration of privilege, race, and sexuality at an elite boarding school (again, adjacent) hit a lot of those notes.
Sometimes I wonder if the sheer pressure to publish more 'diverse' books leads to some being a bit checklist-y, but the best ones weave culture into the conflict and desire so it’s not just background decor. The tension between personal ambition and family duty in 'Made in Korea' felt particularly sharp because it was tied to specific cultural and economic realities, not just generically wanting to succeed.
Most recommendations I see are for contemporary, but don't sleep on fantasy and paranormal college romances for this! 'A Deadly Education' by Naomi Novik is set in a magical school, and the protagonist is half-Indian. The cultural themes are more about systemic classism in the wizard world, but it's brilliant. For a romance-focused one, 'The Demon of the Undertow' by J.R. Gray has queer characters and a darker vibe. It's not always about ethnicity; sometimes diversity in genre itself is refreshing.
I feel like a lot of these recs are for very recent books. An older one that still holds up is 'The Education of Margot Sanchez' by Lilliam Rivera. It's about a Puerto Rican girl from the Bronx sent to a prep school, dealing with massive class and cultural clashes. The romance is there, but it's tangled up with her family drama and identity. It's raw and doesn't have a neat happy ending, which felt true.
Honestly, I got pretty bored with the whole 'bad boy billionaire' thing in New Adult, so I started hunting for different settings. 'The Shaadi Set-Up' by Lillie Vale isn't strictly college—the characters are in their mid-twenties—but the way it handles Indian-American family pressure and dating rituals scratched a similar itch for me. It made me realize a lot of the 'college' experience in these books is really about that first major step into adult independence while negotiating your background.
For actual campus stories with diversity, 'Excuse Me While I Ugly Cry' by Joya Goffney deals with a Black girl's journal getting leaked, and it tackles class and race at a Texas prep school. It’s messy and the romance isn't perfect, which I liked. Also, 'Counting Down with You' by Tashie Bhuiyan has a fake-dating plot with a Muslim protagonist managing anxiety and cultural expectations, which felt very grounded. I think we need more where the diversity isn't the 'issue' but just the reality the characters navigate while having regular, tropey fun.
I'm trying to think beyond just the main character's ethnicity. A book that stuck with me for its handling of disability and culture was 'Give Me a Sign' by Anna Sortino. It's YA, but the protagonist is a hearing counselor at a camp for the deaf and blind, grappling with her own identity. The romance is sweet and the immersion into Deaf culture is central. For a college-age romance with neurodiversity, 'The Boy with the Bookstore' by Sarah Echavarre Smith has an Filipino-American heroine with anxiety running a shop. The setting is post-college, but the emotional arc feels very 'figuring out life' in that same vein. I find these books often explore 'belonging' in a deeper way than some of the more surface-level cultural references I've seen.
2026-07-14 09:02:49
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