THE OKS ARE NOT OK By Grace K. Shim

Dani Young 

I received this book for free from Publisher in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

THE OKS ARE NOT OK By Grace K. ShimThe Oks Are Not Ok by Grace K. Shim
Published by Kokila on 3/3/26
Genres: Young Adult
Pages: 351
Format: eARC
Source: Publisher
Buy on Amazon
three-stars

Seventeen-year-old Elena Ok (pronounced “Oak”) has mastered the art of being both a Los Angeles party girl and financially savvy influencer, but her family doesn’t see the brilliance behind her carefully curated image. Instead, they endlessly praise her older brother, Gavin, whose most impressive achievement is consistently forgetting his homework. All of Elena’s hard work and social clout disintegrates when the Oks, founders of the wildly popular (and now bankrupt) fast-fashion brand It’s Ok! (pronounced “OKAY”), lose their fortune overnight.

With their empire crumbling and an investigation underway, the Oks flee to Blaire, CA—a farming town that’s as glamorous as Temu. Mr. Ok, a now-disgraced retail mogul, and Mrs. Ok, a now-also-disgraced fashion-forward matriarch, realize they’ve spent decades perfecting their public personas at the expense of actually knowing their kids. Meanwhile, Elena and Gavin are stuck in the middle of nowhere, with nothing to distract them from their family’s unraveling dynamics—or each other’s annoying habits.

But life in Blaire isn’t all bad. As the family reconnects with their Korean farming heritage, Elena discovers a hidden gem: the Blaire Fair, the local market brimming with untapped potential. Applying her business savvy, she helps the small-town vendors thrive and sees how they put their profits back into the community. For the first time, Elena begins to question her own definition of success.

Short and Sweet Review

Elena Ok has built her whole identity around being an LA influencer. She’s stylish, strategic, and way smarter about money and branding than her family gives her credit for. But in their house, her older brother Gavin is the golden child, and Elena is just the “party girl.”
That image and their entire fortune disappears overnight when the Ok family’s fast-fashion empire collapses in scandal and bankruptcy. Suddenly, they’re forced to leave Los Angeles and hide out in Blaire, a tiny farming town in California with no WiFi, no cell service, and basically none of the things Elena’s life depends on.


The Oks Are Not OK is very much a fish-out-of-water story. Watching this formerly wealthy, image-obsessed family adjust to farm life is honestly entertaining. They go from staff and luxury to small-town markets and dusty fields, and the culture shock is real. At the center of the story is the family dynamic, especially between Elena and Gavin. Being stuck together forces them to actually talk and confront years of favoritism, resentment, and misunderstandings. Their sibling relationship ends up being one of the strongest parts of the book. It feels messy in a realistic way, but you can see the growth happening.
Elena herself can be frustrating at first. She views everything through a branding lens, and her priorities feel shallow early on. But that’s kind of the point. As her influencer status disappears and her “friends” vanish with it, she’s forced to figure out who she is without validation and followers. Her character development is satisfying, even if it comes a little later in the story than it could have.
The small-town setting works well, especially as the family reconnects with their Korean farming roots. There’s a strong theme about heritage, identity, and what success really means. The Blaire Fair storyline where Elena uses her business skills to help local vendors is one of the more meaningful parts of the book and shows that her talents were never the problem. It was just how she was using them.
Where the book struggles a bit is in the ending. The financial scandal that kicks off the entire plot doesn’t feel fully resolved, and some threads get wrapped up a little too quickly. The romance elements are also pretty light and slightly underdeveloped.


Overall, this is a quick, easy contemporary YA about family, image, and redefining success. It’s funny at times, heartfelt at others, and strongest when it focuses on the relationships within the Ok family. It may not tie up every loose end perfectly, but it’s an enjoyable story about learning that building a life matters more than building a brand.

three-stars

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