This was a really great surprise. Like some other reviewers, I think I was expecting a lighter book than I got (mostly from the cover and a quick skim of the description.) However, it's not a light romance (I'd argue it's not really a romance at all!) and I really appreciated that it dives deeper into concerns of racism, colorism, assimilation, group identity, collective memory, grief, and police brutality. I liked Rosa and found her easy to root for, and appreciated that her narration does not shy away from the nitty-gritty of her experiences as a white-passing Mexican American in integration-era Phoenix, AZ.
This all said, I'm not sure ROSA BY ANY OTHER NAME needed to lean quite as far into the Shakespeare inspiration as it did, and that's bringing it down a bit for me. The names of the "star-crossed lover" characters (Julianne Callihan and Ramón Montoya) immediately call towards R&J, and Rosa(line) and even Marco (Mercutio?) and Tim (Tybalt?) are nods. These and even Verón (Mexican radio show host, nodding to Verona) were nice touches... but ultimately I don't feel that Julianne and Ramón's story had enough in common with Romeo & Juliet to justify such heavy-handed references. As far as I can tell, the resemblances between their stories are that they fall in love quickly, it leads to their untimely and tragic deaths, there is a scene set outside a 2nd floor window, and that the R&Js are from vastly different, and "warring," families/cultural groups. I think their story would have been stronger - or at least more grounded in the historical reality - outside of the constraints of the Shakespearean influence.
Other reviewers have mentioned not loving the writing style and I can see that, but it really worked for me. I even found the bite-size chapters to keep momentum going for me which doesn't usually happen to me with chapters of that length. I also thought the newspaper clippings, though of course edited, were really useful insights into what the rhetoric actually was at the time. All said, I'll highly recommend this one, but I probably won't present it as a Shakespeare retelling.
Thanks to NetGalley and Viking Books for the eARC.