In South Central, falling in love isn't just a risk-it's a declaration of war.
Seventeen-year-old Kalvin King thought he'd left his trauma behind in Oakland. But a move to Los Angeles drops him into a high school divided by invisible borders and a "fresh start" that feels more like a battlefield. At Lincoln High, the rules are simple: stay with your own, or pay the price. When Kalvin saves Brenda Ramirez during a brutal campus fight, he breaks the first rule. Brenda is studious, beautiful, and the daughter of a traditional Mexican American family-everything Kalvin is told he shouldn't want. Their connection is instant, but in a neighborhood fueled by historical bias and hair-trigger tensions, their romance is the spark that lights a fuse. As a school-wide riot threatens to tear the city apart and their own families demand they choose sides, Kalvin and Brenda must decide: Is their love worth the fallout, or will the weight of the streets crush them both? Like Adding Pepper to Beans is a raw, unflinching look at interracial love, cultural identity, and the courage it takes to build a bridge in a world designed to burn them down.