It must have been a slow day at my library if I picked up a book without knowing anything about it. But I guess I was taken by the premise and setting - a love and coming-of-age story set in modern India. I am familiar with India quite well and have never read any YA on the subject, so I decided to give it a go. Sorry to say, nothing worth of attention here.
"Koyal Dark, Mango Sweet" (meaning here Jeeta is a dark-skinned girl who is expected to have a sweet, mango-like, temper to find a husband) is neither a love story nor a coming-of-age story. It is simply a lukewarm narration filled with peculiarities of Indian culture - arranged marriages, expensive weddings, caste system, difficulties of dating, discrimination based on the skin color, all delivered in an extremely juvenile way. You would never thing that the narrator, Jeeta, is almost 18, she sure talks and acts like she is 11. There is no drama here, no mystery, no passion, no big revelations. Jeeta by the end of the story decides to go to college. That's it.
On a positive side, although book is of a very low literally quality, gives a nice "taste" of India with some authentic descriptions of food, clothes, and customs. But that's all, unfortunately.
Good only as an introduction to Indian culture for middle-graders.