Buy new:
Save with Used - Good

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

Image Unavailable
Color:
-
-
-
- To view this video download Flash Player
Love Radio Hardcover – May 31, 2022
Purchase options and add-ons
Hitch meets The Sun Is Also a Star in this “mega swoon-worthy, effortlessly cool” (Casey McQuiston, New York Times bestselling author) novel about a self-professed teen love doctor with a popular radio segment who believes he can get a girl who hates all things romance to fall in love with him in only three dates.
Prince Jones is the guy with all the answers—or so it seems. After all, at seventeen, he has his own segment on Detroit’s popular hip-hop show, Love Radio, where he dishes out advice to the brokenhearted.
Prince has always dreamed of becoming a DJ and falling in love. But being the main caretaker for his mother, who has multiple sclerosis, and his little brother means his dreams will stay just that and the only romances in his life are the ones he hears about from his listeners. Until he meets Dani Ford.
Dani isn’t checking for anybody. She’s focused on her plan: ace senior year, score a scholarship, and move to New York City to become a famous author. But her college essay keeps tripping her up and acknowledging what’s blocking her means dealing with what happened at that party a few months ago. And that’s one thing Dani can’t do.
When the romantic DJ meets the ambitious writer, sparks fly. Prince is smitten, but Dani’s not looking to get derailed. She gives Prince just three dates to convince her that he’s worth falling for. Three dates for the love expert to take his own advice, and just maybe change two lives forever.
- Reading age14+ years, from customers
- Print length320 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Grade level7 - 9
- Lexile measure760L
- Dimensions5.5 x 1 x 8.25 inches
- PublisherSimon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
- Publication dateMay 31, 2022
- ISBN-101665908157
- ISBN-13978-1665908153
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
Frequently bought together

More items to explore
From the Publisher





Editorial Reviews
From School Library Journal
Review
Ebony LaDelle's Love Radio is an absorbing and romantic YA debut. High school senior Dani Ford doesn't have time for love; more importantly, she's not interested in it--at least, not the way it's portrayed in the old Black romcoms her mother adores. Dani is focused on applying for early admission to MFA programs, writing an "amazing" essay and moving to New York City where she'll become "the next Maya or Audre." But she is suffering in silence after a recent painful experience, the trauma giving her writer's block and threatening to unravel all her plans.
Seventeen-year-old Prince Jones (aka DJ LoveJones) is a local Detroit celebrity: he's the only teen DJ on Love Radio, where he gives relationship advice to callers. Prince, who is the main caretaker for his mother (who has multiple sclerosis) and his seven-year-old brother, Mook (who's been diagnosed with ADHD), believes his dreams of becoming a DJ and one day falling in love don't seem particularly achievable. Despite this mindset, Prince gathers the courage to talk to his longtime crush, Dani, who is aggressively disinterested. In a last-ditch effort, Prince convinces Dani that if she goes on just three dates with him, she'll fall in love.
Love Radio is a beautifully written novel that gives readers intimate first-person perspectives of both protagonists. LaDelle covers big topics like love, disability, parental abandonment, depression and sexual assault delicately and with empathy. Dani and Prince's love story shows teen readers that taking a leap or stepping outside your boundaries can lead to new experiences and growth.--Natasha Harris, freelance -- Shelf Awareness - STARRED REVIEW ― 6/10/2022
“Love Radio is pure joy. This book is a celebration of Black love, Black teenagers, Black friendship, and the Black family, and I adored it from beginning to end.” -- Jasmine Guillory, New York Times bestselling author
"Prepare to swoon: LaDelle's Love Radio gives voice to some of the sweetest hopes and the hardest truths. Readers won't be able to get enough of these dope-ass characters." -- Elizabeth Acevedo, author of Clap When You Land
“We've been waiting for an author like Ebony LaDelle. Love Radio is mega swoonworthy, effortlessly cool, and full of heart. Turn this one all the way up.” -- Casey McQuiston, New York Times bestselling author of Red, White & Royal Blue and One Last Stop
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Danielle
I’ve never met a person more drunk on love than my mom. She’s got a list of old-school romance movies she’s always been obsessed with and has the nerve to rate them in order of her favorites. Thing is, that order changes every month.
For September it’s:
- Love Jones
- Love & Basketball
- Waiting to Exhale
- How Stella Got Her Groove Back
- Jason’s Lyric
- … the list goes on and on. But you get the point.
I’d be lying if I said I’ve never watched these movies with her… multiple times… maybe more like thousands of times. But the verdict is still out on how I feel about them.
“This is the best part, sweetie,” Mom says, pointing at the screen. “Look!”
Every part is the best part, according to her.
I watch her as she’s intensely focused on a movie she’s seen over and over again, her feet tucked underneath her butt, her elbow perched on the couch’s armrest, and her head resting in her hands. Everyone says my forehead scrunches just like hers when we’re concentrating, the brown of it all creasing like the frosting on a caramel cake. “Camille spit you out,” says every single relative.
I study her face as her bright, big eyes widen and take in the movie. I guess I have her laser-sharp cheekbones and thick, long hair. But besides that, I’m all Dad. Thank god he’s not the constantly lovesick one.
She clasps her hands together as the hero and heroine kiss. “Isn’t that everything, baby?”
I roll my eyes.
On the one hand, I appreciate Black artistry in all forms. But these movies always follow the same formula:
- 1. You got your main characters—the strong Black female lead who has had enough with life and needs to get rid of some sort of deadweight. Usually she does something drastic—like chopping off her long hair, taking a trip to a remote island, or just throwing herself into her work.
- 2. And then you got your supporting cast. Friends, colleagues, that one over-the-top person who brings comedic relief to the story.
- 2A. They fit into one of two categories as well. Either they are strongly encouraging the main character to go after the love interest…
- 2B. … or they’re strongly discouraging them until the main character has some epiphany about their unhappiness or lack of love and manages to come around at the end.
The plotlines are predictable and always come to a lackluster climax. Super stale. But everyone thinks that’s just my cynical behind.
Take Love Jones. Within the first five minutes, the scene opens with a neon-red sign in the cut, illuminating the Sanctuary, a local, moody, smoke-filled poetry spot where the main characters, Darius and Nina, meet, all while listening to the sleek sounds of a woke brotha schooling Black people about how to talk to one another *basic*. Then smooth-ass Darius rolls up on the stage, reciting some poem that was inspired by Nina, speaking on blues and funk… and sex. Nina blows him off at first, but they eventually get together. Had that been me, I guess the movie would be over before it began, because there’s no way he would have gotten a first date eroticizing me like that.
As the two characters profess their love for one another again, my mom glances over in my direction, expecting me to complain. But I don’t—this time. She would just say that these romance tropes are everywhere, and with White Hollywood feeding us Black trauma porn, why not show more romances onscreen with Black leads?
And so, I’m conflicted. As a writer I love watching for the cinematography, the banter, the showcase of a Black love story blossoming. But at my core, I’m not a rom-com type of girl. The tropes alone make me uneasy when you really think about them.
Childhood friends? I gag at the thought of dating anyone in the cesspool of boys from my childhood.
Falling in love with a bad boy? Let’s examine the abusiveness of this trope.
Enemies to lovers? Funniest one yet.
Forbidden love? Mkay.
Just not feeling any of these. If we really want to go there, they’re all problematic and simple. Give me writing with more conflict, more depth, something that’s more nuanced and grips you, makes you question the world around you. Let’s talk about real-life issues that affect us daily, and the traumas our community is untangling. At least, that’s the type of writing I want to do.
I feel like the platform should be used to bring more meaning into this world than just a story about two people falling in love. Just my humble opinion.
Still, for some reason, every time I’m tasked with dusting the shelves of our basement entertainment center and my mom’s DVD collection—yeah, don’t even get me started—I can’t help but pull out Love Jones and look at the package. It’s the scene of Darius and Nina passionately kissing, in the rain. When no Black girl with a silk press is really gonna want to stand out there and lock lips while getting their hair drenched. And yet? Sometimes I catch myself daydreaming it’s me.
“We all deserve a big love story,” Mom says as the love scene fades out. “There’s nothing better.”
“I guess, Ma.” I take a deep sigh and exhale it into my blanket. I don’t want a lecture today.
I know I sound pessimistic and all over the place. But the truth is, the concept of love just ain’t that simple anymore. What people call love now is merely infatuation—more about themselves than trying to actually get to know a person. Whatever happened to asking someone out to dinner, walking you up to your porch to make sure you get in safe, having picnics in the park, or passing notes to profess your love? Whatever happened to love that isn’t superficial?
I stare up at the family portrait still hanging beside the TV.
Take my parents. While climbing up the military ranks, my dad always said he was searching for his “other rib.” And he found her in my mother, a second-year student at University of Detroit Mercy, a private Catholic school in the city. My dad did it all; once he got to know my mom and what she liked, he prided himself on taking my mom places she didn’t know about, even though she was born and bred in the Motor City. He wrote her love notes with lines from his favorite poems and her favorite songs, showered her with flowers because she had a budding interest in gardening. He courted her.
Meanwhile, most of the guys I know are way too shallow and self-absorbed. They send messages telling their new pursuits how sexy they are. Dudes hit you up depending on how valuable you are online; how many likes and comments you get from your most recent selfie. But the worst of it is, guys don’t show respect. No matter how you “present” yourself, how you act, what you do or don’t do, a guy will still push it to the limit. Make you feel uncomfortable. Won’t respect your wishes when no means… no.
I start chuckling when Mom bursts into tears from all the fake movie emotions.
“You laugh now,” she says, catching me looking at her. “But wait until it’s your heart. It reminds me so much of me and your dad.”
I think of my mom and wonder, How did she create me? A girl who’s so disconnected from love it’s frightening. My mom lets out a sigh and turns off the DVD player as the credits roll.
“If that ever happens,” I tell her, getting up from the couch and heading to the kitchen.
I snap open a can of Vernors, listening to the pop hiss as I pour and my mom fuss in the background.
Mom follows me into the kitchen. “You’ll find love one day. And stop drinking pop in my mugs! Use a glass like a civilized human being.”
“Well, the cup’s already dirty, so,” I say, sipping on my drink with a pinky in the air like a refined woman. I love teasing her.
My mom rolls her eyes. “Sooo, any guys at school you’ve been eyeing?”
“Meh,” I mumble, grabbing a bag of Better Made chips from above the fridge. I’m already into the first week of senior year and over it.
Mom opens the dishwasher and adds a few more plates to the load. “There are like, what, five hundred students there? I don’t understand how there hasn’t been one boy who’s piqued your interest.”
I dig loudly into the bag and my mom turns around, inspecting me since we just ate dinner while watching the movie. I find myself slouching, so I stand up straighter and fix my face, trying to do anything to make my anxiety less apparent. But my mom can read me like an open book.
“Are you stressed, Dani? What’s going on with you?”
She’s asking me about boys. Again. Yes, Ma, I’m stressed as hell.
“I’m a teenager. This is what we do,” I grumble, arm deep in the bag of chips. “College applications are a headache, I’m still struggling with this freakin’ essay, and I know New York is expensive, but I’m going to be low-key devastated if I don’t get into any schools there.”
She runs the dishwasher and fixes her gaze intently on me. “I know, baby. You’ve been anxious about that essay for a while now. But if it’s too much to juggle right now, there’s nothing wrong with staying here, either. Michigan has some great schools, and you can even live at home for a few years while you get yourself acclimated,” she adds, smiling. “Plus, your old mama could always use the company.”
I take a long look at my mom. At her silky smooth, dark brown face. At the few gray hairs leaping out of her scalp, the rest masked by her most recent color touch-up. At the clear skin that hasn’t even begun to grow crow’s feet, or the other normal side effects of age I hear my classmates’ mothers complaining about. Thirty-nine. That’s how old she is. When my friends used to marvel at how young she looked, my mom would simply remind them about the benefits of being Black, of having melanin. Studying her face closely right now, she barely looks thirty.
We’re both hitting pinnacles. That’s what Dad calls them. Me heading to college and her turning another decade. I love the age gap between us; she’s young enough where I feel like she’s been open in telling me so much about herself and her life in ways my friends' mothers wouldn’t dare.
But sometimes, I feel like she married my dad and settled into family before her life even began. This isn’t the first conversation we’ve had about me applying for schools in-state while my dad’s on the road. But as much as I love her, I know it’s just as important for me to do my own thing. With all the love and support my parents have given me, I still feel like a caged bird. I gotta fly.
The hum of the dishwasher is the only sound we hear, which is clear—I’ve been quiet for too long—so she goes back to cleaning and pivots. “Plus, you’d probably be more interested in college boys anyway.” Her statement causes me to jolt, and before I know it the mug slips out of my hand and shatters on the kitchen floor. We both jump.
“Dani, are you okay?” she asks.
I’m still standing there, watching the brown liquid fill up the spaces between each tile.
“Dani. Dani!” My mom touches me, and I recoil. Her soft gaze makes me want to curl in a ball and hide somewhere. She stares for a moment too long. “Where did you go just now?”
Unsure of what to say next, I just shake my head.
“Baby, I know something is up. You’ve been acting like this for a while now.” Her voice shakes a little. “Talk to me.”
“It’s nothing, Ma…” Her cell phone rings and my mom jerks.
She hesitates to answer the phone, but before she has time to challenge anything, I tap accept for her and my dad’s face pops up on the screen.
“Hi, babyyyyy!” Dad says, gushing like a big kid and waving into the camera.
“Hey, Dad,” I say, shooting him a head nod.
“How are my two beautiful ladies doing?”
“We’re doing fine,” Mom replies, still looking at me. I can tell she’s trying to collect herself, and I use this time to quickly clean up the broken mug on the floor. She never likes to stress my dad out while he’s away. “Just talking about Dani’s college applications.”
“And how is that going, Dani?”
“It’s going fine, Dad,” I say, throwing away the pieces, and then deflect, “And Ma was watching Love and Basketball. AGAIN! Getting all weepy over the part where Monica asked Quincy to play him for his heart.”
My dad is cracking up and Mom gives me a playful push. “That scene gets me every time, had me wanting to learn how to hoop back in the day. Both of y’all can kiss my Black behind.”
“Gladly,” Dad says, and Mom giggles.
WHY.
I give them both a look of sheer horror. “Okay. Ew. Can y’all keep that to yourselves?” They both laugh again. “Dad, I’ll talk to you later.”
“Love you, sweetheart.”
I blow him a kiss and leave, feeling my mom’s stare burning the back of my neck.
I dart upstairs and dive onto my bed. I stare at the ceiling. I need to clear my mind, to think about something else. After taking a few deep breaths and waiting for my heart to slow, I take in my favorite place in the whole world—my bedroom. My safe haven.
Along with all things love, Mom is obsessed with DIY projects, so about a year ago, we overhauled my room and now the memory washes over me as I stare at my desk.
After we finished, Mom sat on my bed in awe of all we’d done together. Transformed my little girl room into a place for this new version of myself.
“It needs one last thing,” she said before racing out of the room.
I sat there, waiting and wondering if she was going to try to have a talk with me about how I’d been reclusive and kept to myself. I prepared all the excuses. But when she returned, a large box sat in her arms. “Come. Sit at your desk. It’s missing something and I have just the thing.”
My heart thudded as I yanked the tape off the box. “Ma, oh my god, you’ve done enough!” I said. “What the heck is this?”
“Just open it.” She beamed. “And don’t try to pick it up. It’s heavy.”
I opened the lid, and inside was a mint-colored Adler typewriter.
“I read somewhere that this collector bought Maya Angelou’s electric Adler typewriter and said that he didn’t care about how it looked or whether it still worked, but he cared that Maya Angelou had touched it. I wanted to get you something that inspired you just the same.”
Together, we lifted the typewriter out. It was perfect. A vintage feel to it, with keys rich and black. The body was shiny and luminescent, like it had been buffed and waxed until it was made glossy and new.
“Did you restore this?” I asked.
“Yeah, sort of,” she said. “There were a few online that looked like they went through it. But I found this one and it didn’t need much, just a little TLC. I figured a few touch-up coats and some new keys would make it look brand-new. And it did.”
I ran my fingers over the keys, over the slick body of the machine. And then I saw an emblem underneath the strikers that made me stop dead in my tracks. On closer inspection, I realized the lettering wasn’t a logo, but an inscription: MAYA, ALICE, ZORA, TONI, ROXANE, JESMYN, DANI. A knot formed in my throat and I started shaking until I felt my mom’s strong hands behind me, gripping me upright.
“It’s powerful, isn’t it? Seeing your name with the women you admire.” I nodded, unable to form any words. Unable to draw in breath. I’d admired these writers for as long as I could remember, but in recent months their work was the only thing holding me together. To see my name next to theirs helped me see that one day I could be that voice for someone like me.
“I don’t know if you’ll ever use this typewriter to write, but if you do, I want you to see these names as you type and I want you to see your name next to them. They are strong, dynamic forces of nature. So are you. We come from a line of strong women, and this”—my mom pointed at the inscription—“is so you never forget that. You deserve to be next to each and every one of these women on this machine, you hear me?”
She’d given me an instrument to write my way through the gloom and toward my dream of being an author.
The same tears that stirred inside me then come back now. I try to use this as a reminder when I’m seated at my desk, tapping at my typewriter, frustrated that the words that used to spill out so easily no longer flow.
My phone buzzes, yanking me away from that memory.
DESTINY: You need to stop being antisocial and hit up this party with me later
I grimace as I switch my phone to silent mode and pull myself up and to my desk. It’s been over a year, and occasionally Destiny still randomly hits me up like everything is normal. I’m not ready to face her. I tried that already and she dismissed me, making me feel like I asked for it. So screw her.
And just like that, it’s back. Everything from that night begins to repeat like a sports reel replaying on the news, and I’m panting. I try to shift my thoughts and recall an anxiety graphic I saw online. Ways to release the tension in your body:
Roll your head in a circle.
Drop your shoulders.
Take a deep, extended breath from your chest.
I repeat these exercises a few times, until the pressure in my chest begins to lessen and my breath slows.
After that night, my anxiety deepened, and it’s been a struggle to write anything ever since. It started with the short stories I used to enjoy scribbling in my journal, and then spilled over into my college applications and the dreaded essay. Think about an accomplishment, event, or realization that sparked a period of personal growth and a new understanding of yourself or others. After weeks of staring at my computer screen, I decided to move on to my typewriter, hoping the names my mom had inscribed on this piece of metal would carry me out of the writer’s block. But the only thing that’s seemed to help me was typing letters to writers I may never meet, sharing how their stories seem to be the only thing helping me. I sit in front of my typewriter now.
High school is a time to grow, to evolve, and for me it feels like I’ve receded, still not being able to shake something that should be behind me. Maybe I shouldn’t be so stuck in the past. Maybe I should get over it, but no matter what I try, nothing seems to work. Even in the privacy of my room, in my own damn thoughts, maybe there is no safe haven here. As much as I love this city, maybe I won’t stop feeling like this until I’m out of Detroit, starting a new life with new people surrounding me. Building a new crew of people I can trust.
Sometimes it be the ones closest to you that hurt you the most.
Dear Maya,
I’m feeling what you felt growing up. A caged bird. I’m crying out to everyone and to no one at all. My mind is full of rage and hurt and… noise. I can’t escape my shrieks and cries and yet I’m unable to sing a song to the people I love the most. My family. My friends.
I can tell my mom notices my retreat—I think she appreciates me being home more while my dad is away, but she knows my social life is at a standstill. She keeps asking about Rashida, and Esi, and Destiny. What do I tell her? That I have no trust in anyone? Even close friends? Because when they’re supposed to have your back but don’t, that pain is hard to shake. How do I tell her I need help without her prying and asking what’s wrong? Without her wanting to know every detail of that humiliating night? How do I tell my dad, who grew up only understanding to pray the pain away, that prayer won’t be enough?
The most important question is, why do I feel so deeply ashamed? I felt like you did, Maya, in that courtroom. I felt strong in my convictions, that in the moment I didn’t want it. But now I’m not so sure. I wish I knew, Maya, I wish I knew. How were you able to find your voice again? I keep rereading your words, looking for answers. Looking for closure.
In my darkest hour, thank you for continuing to give me what no one can. You are my remedy. You are my cure.
Dani
Product details
- Publisher : Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
- Publication date : May 31, 2022
- Edition : Uncorrected Proof
- Language : English
- Print length : 320 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1665908157
- ISBN-13 : 978-1665908153
- Item Weight : 14.4 ounces
- Reading age : 14+ years, from customers
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1 x 8.25 inches
- Grade level : 7 - 9
- Lexile measure : 760L
- Best Sellers Rank: #74,122 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Videos
Videos for this product
2:26
A Love Letter to Detroit From LOVE RADIO Author Ebony LaDellePublisher Video
About the author

Ebony is the author of LOVE RADIO—which was People magazine’s best book of the summer, Apple Books’ best book of 2022, an Amazon's Editor Pick and was featured on the Today Show. Prior to being an author, Ebony was a brand marketing director in book publishing and worked at Penguin Random House and HarperCollins, among others. Born in MI, awoken at Howard University, and cultivated in Brooklyn, Ebony can usually be found eating out somewhere or being the undisputed Mom Friend of any group. You can visit her online at www.ebonyladelle.com and follow her on social at @ebonyladelle.
Customer reviews
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star5 star71%24%5%0%0%71%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star4 star71%24%5%0%0%24%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star3 star71%24%5%0%0%5%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star2 star71%24%5%0%0%0%
- 5 star4 star3 star2 star1 star1 star71%24%5%0%0%0%
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers describe this romance novel as a beautiful story of black love, with well-developed characters and in-depth character development. The book receives positive feedback for its readability, with one customer noting it's everything a YA rom-com should be. Customers appreciate the musical aspect of the book, and one review highlights the supportive family units.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Select to learn more
Customers enjoy this romance novel, describing it as a beautiful story of black love that is endearing and heartwarming.
"This book is the epitome of a romance book. It is now one of my most favorite romance books and one of my favorite books of all time ...." Read more
"...I don’t live in the heart of the city anymore but this made me so nostalgic, I felt like I was reading parts of my childhood and it brought back so..." Read more
"...There are also some underlying lessons about choosing the right friends and speaking about hard things/giving yourself space to feel the magnitude..." Read more
"...She writes about her hometown with such affection and great attention to detail...." Read more
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a great and wonderful YA book, with one customer noting they were invested from the beginning.
"...I just love this book so much . It will always have a special place in my heart and now I need the physical copy on my bookshelf!" Read more
"This is the most perfect book ever😭 all i have in my head rn is “Feels so Right” by Janet Jackson and IYKYK, it’s PERFECT for this book...." Read more
"...I really loved Ebony LaDelle's writing style—what an incredibly strong debut!..." Read more
"...Love Radio is a wonderful debut and I look forward to Ebony LaDelle’s future projects! Content Warning: Sexual assault..." Read more
Customers praise the character development in the book, noting its depth and beautiful writing style.
"...The chronic pain/autoimmune representation was very responsibly written and I empathized a lot with all of the responsibilities Prince took on..." Read more
"...Can we talk about how perfectly the author captured the richness, soul & history of Black musicians and literature?..." Read more
"...The supporting/side characters were fleshed out enough to support the main characters and actually add more character to them if that make sense...." Read more
"...Like where was he when I was in high school! He was charismatic, thoughtful, helpful, and selfless!..." Read more
Customers enjoy the audiobook's musical aspects, with one mentioning the electrifying chemistry that blared through the sound waves, and another praising the superb narration.
"...Gosh i loved every musical part of this book, and i may just make another trip to the Motown Museum tbh! 4...." Read more
"...even in the same space while reading, but the electrifying chemistry blared through the sound waves. Their voices were magnetic together 💓..." Read more
"...The growth and maturity of these characters is also admirable. The music references, the Detroit landmarks, the non toxic friends, the growing love..." Read more
Customers appreciate the family support in the book, with one mentioning how supportive the family units are, while another notes the caring teenagers.
"...What I loved most is how tight and supportive the family units were here. I just love that stories like this exist for young people today!..." Read more
"...They were the cutest, most mature, caring teenagers I’ve probably ever read about. ⠀..." Read more
"...the author tackles topics such as young love, coming of age, family relationships, healing from trauma and friendship in this wonderful novel!..." Read more
Reviews with images

Ode to Black Love & A Love Letter to Detroit
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews. Please reload the page.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis book is the epitome of a romance book. It is now one of my most favorite romance books and one of my favorite books of all time . It had me giggling , kicking my feet, twirling my hair and having a full belly laugh . This book is everything and now I can’t wait to read more from this author.
This book follows Dani who has sworn off romantic relationships and even platonic friendships due to a traumatic experience she had. She fills her time planning her future and using that as an excuse to keep her busy from the outside world or talk about what’s happened to her. That is until she meet Prince , the DJ, Love expert and man of my dreams lol. Though he has a mom with a disability, a brother to take care of and a future with music, his busy life doesn’t stop him from convincing Dani to give him a chance and prove that he’s worthy of her time. He plans on getting Dani, the jaded girl he’s been crushing on since middle school, to fall in love with him after 3 dates . Should be easy right ?
This book gave me Love Jones vibes but only in the aspect of them including media and arts in it (not the toxic parts of love jones). Which I lovedddddd.
Prince was literally a renaissance man and so hard not to fall for . I wish I could jump in the book and let Dani know if she didn’t want him I’ll take him ! He was the perfect MMC and the way he wooed Dani was so sweet and romantic . The dates he planned were so thoughtful . He just was a good person all around to everyone he knew also.
I love how strong Dani was. Though she had a lot to work on and things she needed to change it was good to see when she finally took that step to seek help. Also I loved how she stood up for herself as well.
I just love this book so much . It will always have a special place in my heart and now I need the physical copy on my bookshelf!
- Reviewed in the United States on November 19, 2024Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseThis is the most perfect book ever😭
all i have in my head rn is “Feels so Right” by Janet Jackson and IYKYK, it’s PERFECT for this book. Ebony did her BIG ONE!!! Now excuse me while i breakdown everything i loved about this book:
1. The Detroit/Michigan references. The way i actually felt so proud to be from Detroit reading this😭 and I know y’all think EmHen is writing the michigan life but truly NOBODY is doing it like Ebony. You wanna know about my life in Michigan and specifically detroit? read this book! Ebony is putting everyone on to the Detroit experience fr fr. I don’t live in the heart of the city anymore but this made me so nostalgic, I felt like I was reading parts of my childhood and it brought back so many memories 🥹 also the references to Michigan Brands & Restaraunts😭 Like hold on let me crack open a Vernors and get me some Better Maid Chips with a Coney Dog!
2. PRINCE. NEED I SAY MORE? Yall know how much I love the Artist Prince, so seeing this man was named Prince i just knew i was gonna fall in love with him but MY GOD did he exceed all my expectations. Prince is my DREAM man. he’s exactly who i would have wanted in HS, and heck still would want today😩 Him being a radio DJ is so cool. He’s so perfect to me even his flaws 🫶🏼 and his love note to Dani at the end made me cry and idc what that says about me!
3. The Musical aspect about the book. I LOVE MUSIC😩 and I just felt like Ebony really wrote exactly how music makes me feel, and how i feel about music. Gosh i loved every musical part of this book, and i may just make another trip to the Motown Museum tbh!
4. I always say that YA novels help us heal a part of ourselves, and i’m going to be so real I truly needed a book like this as a high schooler. To give me hope that love like this exists, and to be told that I deserve my own love story just like Dani. I am so happy Dani was able to take the necessary steps to heal from her trauma, something that she could’ve easily allowed to hinder her from her family, friends and dreams. It’s such a healthy example for young women who may have experienced the same thing.
Overall i just want to say thank you to Ebony for writing this book, it was everything and more and truly just means so much to me. This is easily one of the best books i’ve ever read in my life 🥹💌
- Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2025Format: KindleVerified PurchaseHow CUTE is Love Radio?! I had such a fun time with this YA romance that felt very 90s Black love films-coded and made me laugh a few times. I really loved Ebony LaDelle's writing style—what an incredibly strong debut! I didn't mind all the pop culture references that are typically found in YA books because some of these references had roots in history and can very much put young people onto knowledge.
Dani and Prince each had their own things to work through but I liked how this story emphasized two young people submitting to how it feels to open yourself up to someone when you're having a really hard time in life. There are also some underlying lessons about choosing the right friends and speaking about hard things/giving yourself space to feel the magnitude of harm without blaming yourself that I really enjoyed. The chronic pain/autoimmune representation was very responsibly written and I empathized a lot with all of the responsibilities Prince took on because of it.
Prince kind of rubbed me wrong in the beginning, to be honest. He came across as very cocky and kind of like a player, but he's not at all that way deep down, so it felt out of place. That is a very teenage-boy way to behave, I suppose, but Prince is otherwise so mature and level-headed—I mean part of his storyline is that he's so wise and mature that he gives grown people love advice on the radio—I doubt he'd advise a listener to act cocky and tell the girl they've been crushing on for a while that they will make them fall in love within 3 dates.
What I loved most is how tight and supportive the family units were here. I just love that stories like this exist for young people today!
4.5 ⭐️s
Top reviews from other countries
- Priscilla ObengReviewed in the United Kingdom on January 4, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Lovely
I enjoyed reading it. I like how it talks about the black love story . The storyline was very interesting.
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 27, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Had me sobbing
I finished the book in about 2 days as I could not put it down.
I’m a hopeless romantic and yes the Love story of Danielle and Prince will captivate you, but mostly their own personal growth and what both characters are going through.
The journey that Ebony Ladelle takes us through this book is beautiful, it’s about love but also about loving yourself enough to let go, of the past, of responsibilities that won’t allow you to change your dreams.
A 10/10 I will definitely be rereading the story again
- AnnReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 20, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book!
I finished the book in about 2 weeks and it normally takes me at least a month to finish a book. I'm lowkey sad that I'm done reading it but the book still lives rent free in my mind!
- Stephanie EmeyeReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 21, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Would highly recommend
It was a beautiful and emotional read. Had me taking some time to process my own thoughts and feelings about self-love and being in a romantic relationship.