Summary, take one, for that Romeo and Juliet thing:
A high school Shakespeare club angrily splits into two groups when they can’t agree on the correct interpretation of Romeo and Juliet. Is it a sincere story about love conquering hate, or a cautionary tale about the folly of youth? Violet (the believer) and Gideon (the cynic) are both positive they’re the one in the right. With the end-of-year play hanging in the balance, someone had better be.
Then again, maybe they all have better things to do. The feud’s brought out the worst in everybody, it’s almost exams time, and life after high school is looking scarier and scarier. Especially for Violet and Gideon, who realise they have more in common than they first thought. A lot more. But they’ll have to contend with parents, Facebook, an angry Rosalind, an overenthusiastic Mercutio, tragedy, fighting, failure, and all the other sorts of problems that have plagued teenagers for hundreds of years if these not-exactly-star-crossed lovers are going to have a remotely happy ending.