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📚 Get ready to turn the page on your summer romance!
The Summer I Turned Pretty is a coming-of-age novel by Jenny Han that follows the life of Belly Conklin as she navigates the complexities of love and friendship during her summer vacations at a beach house. With its rich storytelling and relatable themes, this book has become a staple for young adult readers.









| Best Sellers Rank | #1,388 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #3 in Teen & Young Adult Fiction on Dating & Sex (Books) #5 in Teen & Young Adult Fiction on Girls' & Women's Issues (Books) #21 in Teen & Young Adult Contemporary Romance |
| Book 1 of 3 | Summer series |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (74,368) |
| Dimensions | 5.5 x 0.76 x 8.25 inches |
| Edition | Reprint |
| Grade level | 7 - 9 |
| ISBN-10 | 1416968296 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-1416968290 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 304 pages |
| Publication date | April 6, 2010 |
| Publisher | S&S Books for Young Readers |
| Reading age | 12 years and up |
A**R
Young love, in all its up and down glory!
Isabel `Belly' Conklin measures her life in summers. Each year it's a countdown to the glorious months spent in Cousins, at Susannah's summer house. Belly's mother and Susannah are childhood friends, as close as sisters. Belly and her brother Steven have been visiting the summer house since infancy, and spending long, lazy summer days in the company of Susannah's boys, Conrad and Jeremiah Fisher. As much as Belly loves the summer house and visiting her pretend-mother Susannah, she always feels out of step with her childhood friends. She is the youngest of the summer kids, and the only girl in this close-knit boys club. She was always pleading to tag along or being left out - desperate to be a part of the group, but always out of sync. Things became even more complicated for Belly when she developed her first real crush on Conrad, the elder of the Fisher boys. Jeremiah was always funny and smiling, he is Belly's best friend in the whole world. But Conrad, he's different. The eldest of the kids, he is quiet and aloof, full of pride and quiet intensity and Belly hero-worshipped him throughout her younger years. As a young teenager her crush turned to love of the first and permanent kind . . . but as much as Belly pined after Conrad, he remained oblivious to her devotion . . . Until this summer. This summer, Belly is turning sixteen, and Jeremiah and Conrad are both noticing her in a whole new light. The summer house is where Belly did most of her growing up, and experienced the majority of her first's. First kiss. First crush. First love. First heartbreak. `The Summer I Turned Pretty' is the first book in the contemporary romance YA `Summer' trilogy from Jenny Han. I have had all three `Summer' books sitting in my TBR pile since April. I impulsively bought them when the final book in the trilogy was released, and `Summer' fandom seemed to reach a fever-pitch. I was pretty sure I'd love these books - they sounded like a good, juicy bit of contemporary romance fun and I adored the whimsical front covers. Still, I was a little taken aback by just how much I loved these books . . . consuming all three in one weekend and devouring a box of Kleenex in the process! The same way that other children measure the year according to Christmas's approach, Belly measures by summers. Every year for as long as she can remember she, her mother and brother would leave their father behind and venture to Cousins and the summer house. It was here that Belly took comfort in the nurturing home of Susannah, her mother's dearest friend and Belly's confidante (whom she often felt closer to than her own biological mother). But the summer house was most special for Belly's boys - Jeremiah and Conrad. These are two people she has grown up with - from bullying kids to surly young adults and finally turning into intriguing young men . . . Belly's story is that of young love. Because as much as her calendar is a countdown to summer, Belly's life has been marked by these two boys and their impact on her. . . Jeremiah owns her first kiss. Conrad taught her to dance. They have, in turn, been her best friends and worst enemies. Jenny Han marks the up's and down's of Belly's tumultuous friendship with the boys - from young buddies to blossoming crushes - through flashbacks of various other summers. As Belly lives out the summer of her sweet sixteen, she is in turns astounded and curious at the impact her changing self is having on Jeremiah and Conrad . . . as their dynamic alters, she thinks back to the summer's when she was 11, 12, 13 and nothing but an annoying tag-along to their big boys club. I'm not always a huge fan of the flashback, but Han utilizes it superbly - equal parts informative and whimsical. It's the retrospect of a young girl; so Belly swings between being outraged by the boy's bad behaviour, to heart sick with love for the older and elusive Conrad. Her flashbacks are tragic because they're so relatable, never more so than when she's 13 and watching from the sidelines as Conrad starts to take an interest in the opposite sex (except for her) and when he starts treating her more like a little sister than an equal. I loved Belly's younger voice, particularly because Han's deft pen does give Belly a different echo between her rewinding younger self, and current sixteen-year-old bewildered by her newfound magnetism. When these books were initially released and creating a furore, I was a little sceptical of the title. `The Summer I Turned Pretty' sounded sickeningly egotistical, and I worried that this would be a book about a girl realizing her body's new effect on the opposite sex. Let's face it, as women we've all known girls like that . . . those who were so sweet in their younger years, but became boy-crazy in puberty and saw fellow female as `the enemy'. Thankfully, Han's title is a little misleading . . . It's clear from Conrad and Jeremiah's reactions to her that Belly has grown from a child into a young woman in the span of one year. To read their responses to her, we can tell that Belly has even turned into quite the beautiful young woman. But Belly herself remains none the wiser. She still prefers oversized T-shirts to dresses. She hates heels and lives in sneakers. And she marks herself as wanting when she compares her looks to the girl's Conrad is interested in. Han also discounts Belly's vanity by comparing her to her best friend, Taylor, who visited the summer house at age 14 and was indeed one of those girls who was pretty, and knew it. I loved Belly. I loved that she was oblivious to herself, yet acutely aware of those around her. She is a very observant young girl, especially when it comes to Jeremiah and Conrad. She wisely observes the fact that she feels a twinge of jealousy when Jeremiah takes an interest in Taylor (when he has never noticed Belly in such a way). And she can read Conrad like an open book, even when his actions belie his true feelings . . . . Belly is just like so many young girls. Awkward and blossoming, unknowing of herself and unbelieving of people's interest in her. I loved Belly and her evolving relationship with the summer boys. But I also think that `The Summer I Turned Pretty' is a rather impressive character exploration. Conrad and Jeremiah are not boy-crush-prototypes. They're both complicated and messy young men - Conrad in his surly anger and quiet pride, and Jeremiah's hidden feelings of inferiority against his older brother, beloved by their father. And it's not just that boys who get deep back story - the adults in Han's novel are as important as their children. Susannah is keeping secrets, and it's more than just her crumbling marriage. Belly can't figure out why her parents divorced, but believes it's because her mother is an enigma. . . I love any YA book that puts parents in the spotlight and doesn't just sweep them under the rug. Han writes an excellent intertwining story of young and old, heartbreak and romance by including stories that concern the young characters and their parents. `The Summer I Turned Pretty' is a great little slice of contemporary romance. It's a very tame romance, since Belly is just starting out in womanhood . . . but the book is full of wanting. Belly's heartache bleeds on the page and every girl reading (and a few women too!) will completely and utterly live Belly's soaring crush and devastating heartbreak. It's young love, in all it's up and down glory.
S**Y
My Heart Has Yet to Recover
*Review posted on Mundie Moms on 7/22/2016* Ah summer, when my TBR is filled with contemporary books. How many of you are like me and own this series, but somehow other newer reads always bump up ahead of it? I decided that it's languished on my shelves for far too long, so this week, I buddy-read it with my teen daughter. I highly recommend reading this with someone just because (trust me on this), you will need to talk to someone about it. Belly is exactly the type of character you imagined from reading the synopsis. She is the quiet, forgotten, tag-a-long to the boys' adventures. Jenny throws in a nice dose of flashbacks, so that the relationships evolve logically and insta-love is pretty much non-existent. The long, hot summer timeline gives relationships plenty of time to come together and fall apart and change in the most realistic of ways. For example, the friendship between the two mothers is so realistic and lovely in its layers that you actually begin to think wait, do I know them in real life? I've read plenty of love triangles, but in Jenny's hands, this particular push-pull set of relationships is unbelievably real. I found myself rooting for both boys at different times in the story. I even understood bad boy Conner. I didn't want to like him, and yet, I couldn't help it. Belly, girl, I completely get you. Summer days are long and this is a book you can finish in two trips to the pool. Belly's story has a depth you won't expect and that merited an extra star in its rating. The last quarter of the book is a page-turner which ends (no spoiler, but you've been warned) in a cliffhanger to end all (WHATOHNOWHAT) cliffhangers. So, get the sequel ready. A quick aside on the audiobook, I would rate it at about 2.5-3 stars. The performance of the narrator makes the book feel like you're reading an elementary-age story. I found her overly dramatic, high-pitched and slow delivery distracting and frankly, a lot easier to take at 1.25 speed (at which her reading pace sounded normal to my ears). I won't be listening to books 2 and 3, but I have them in paperback and I've already started book 2 and boy, does it start off with a bang. My heart has yet to recover.
I**S
Amazing!! Team Conrad!!
I love this book so much the story is so amazing I’ve read it 3 times and the book is gorgeous you really but sucked into the story and very invested in it love love love
T**N
Boring but interesting at the same time
It’s okay a little boring but interesting at the same time
J**F
Good book for teen. I recommend as my daughter loves the author.
S**A
Excellent book. Keeps you wanting more. Love the dynamic between the brothers and how it pulls your heart making you root for one over the other to win Belly's heart.
A**A
Did not like this
H**M
My daughter enjoyed it so much .. it arrived in good condition.. the corner was a little bent though
A**H
It’s a ok book definitely better for younger readers around 12-14 A little boring for me, took a lot for a simple thing to happen I loved the second book in the series more tho (it’s not summer without you)
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