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Average rating5
"Extraordinary... a raw, vulnerable, breath-stealing love you can feel as you read." —Emily Henry "Dazzling, tender, and romantic." —Carley Fortune Lifelong best friends spend a fateful summer discovering what might happen if they were to be something more in this radiant, heart-clenching adult debut. Laniah Thompson is a homebody who craves privacy. Issac Jordan is internet famous and spends his days followed by paparazzi. She runs a small business with her mom in her hometown. He runs an international brand. And they’ve been best friends since childhood. When Issac comes home to Providence for the first time in months and discovers Laniah’s dream is slipping out of reach as she and her mom struggle to pay the bills at Wildly Green, their natural hair store, she refuses to take a dime from him. And so, he does what any self-respecting best friend would do: tells the world they’re dating. Suddenly business is booming, and Laniah agrees to his ridiculous plan to pretend to be lovers for the course of the summer. Just long enough to catch the eye of an investor and get her dream back on track, like she helped him do so many years ago, he reminds her. Too soon, though, Laniah knows she’s playing with fire, because for as long as they’ve been friends there’s an undeniable pull they’ve never given in to. And as the lines between art and life—real and pretend—blur, it becomes harder and harder to see where friendship ends and something else begins.... Told over the course of three sizzling summer months, A Love Like the Sun is about shared history, those who make us our bravest selves, and love in its many forms.
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3/5 - I wanted to truly love this book, but I was bored for about 70% of it. I'm not a fan of a self deprecating FMC characters as her inner dialogue of questioning everything was insufferable at times. What kept me reading the book was me trying to figure out what was wrong with her health wise, which had me shook at the end. That particular plot of the story has made me more aware of all of my symptoms. The last 30% of the book was the meat I was looking for.