Some of the most relatable characters are the ones who are just trying to figure out how to be a person. 'Emergency Contact' by Mary H.K. Choi follows Penny and Sam, two college freshmen who connect via text. They're both disasters in their own ways—anxious, awkward, carrying baggage. Their strength is their vulnerability in those late-night messages. The romance builds slowly through shared insecurities, not grand gestures. It captures that specific feeling of forming a deep connection with someone you barely know how to talk to in person, which is peak young adult experience. The book is less about being strong in a traditional sense and more about finding someone who makes you feel strong enough to be your messy self.
Honestly, the relatability question is tricky. A lot of 'strong' leads in YA romance feel performative, like they're ticking boxes for quippy dialogue and sarcasm instead of showing vulnerability. What stuck with me was Nina from 'Leigh Bardugo's 'Six of Crows'. She's unapologetically loud, loves food, uses her powers in clever ways, but her strength is undercut by this deep-seated insecurity about her body and her place. Her romance with Matthias is built on challenging each other's worldviews, not just attraction. That internal conflict—feeling powerful in one moment and deeply unsure in another—felt way more true to my teen years than any flawless, snarky heroine.
On the flip side, 'I'll Give You the Sun' by Jandy Nelson nails the messy, art-obsessed, chaotic energy of being a teen. Noah's chapters are this raw torrent of desire and anxiety, while Jude's are all about guilt and rebuilding. Their voices are so distinct and imperfect. The romantic elements are tangled up in family drama and personal identity, which makes the characters' strength come from surviving their own mistakes, not from being born leaders. The book's structure itself mirrors how teens often see their lives in fragmented, dramatic pieces.
Forget the chosen ones and the super-soldiers. Give me characters whose strength is in just getting through the day. 'Starfish' by Akemi Dawn Bowman has a protagonist, Kiko, who deals with social anxiety and a toxic home life. Her 'strength' is her quiet resilience, her ability to finally say no and pursue her art. The romantic subplot with a fellow artist is gentle and supportive; it doesn't 'fix' her, it just gives her a safe space to exist. That felt incredibly real.
Another one is 'The Love Interest' by Cale Dietrich. It's a satirical take on YA tropes, but at its heart are two boys trained to be perfect love interests discovering their own identities. Their strength is in rejecting the manipulative system they're trapped in. It's relatable for anyone who's ever felt pressured to perform a version of themselves for acceptance. The romance is born from shared secrets and mutual understanding of the facade, which is a dynamic I think a lot of teens would recognize, even without the spy thriller backdrop.
2026-07-15 03:02:50
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Eden High Series
Jordan Silver
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Sian Claiborne is not a happy camper. Just when she was getting into the groove of high school hijinks, her parents decide to pick up stakes. Now the popular cheerleader is off to the Ritz and glamor of the Hollywood Hills, where her new school is home to the offspring of Hollywood's elite. Determined to hold her own, she befriends one of the school's outcasts on her first day, thus drawing a line in the sand between her and the ever-popular 'Mean Girls'. Little does she care until she claps eyes on Jace Saunders and almost loses her pompoms.Of course, the head cheerleader already has her eyes set on Jace and lets Sian know in no uncertain terms that he's off-limits. Jace Saunders has taken one look at the new girl, and this son of Hollywood royalty wants what he sees. But Jace has history with the most popular girl in school, a girl who has already warned off Sian, and what about Sian's parents? Are they going to allow their daughter to date someone as high profile as Jace?
She is focused, disciplined, and determined to survive her first year at university. He is reckless, irresistible, and the most notorious athlete on campus. When fate throws them together, sparks fly and rules are broken. Falling for the bad boy athlete was never part of her plan, but resisting him could cost her everything. Secrets, rivalries, and a dangerous attraction push them to the edge. Can love survive when their worlds are at war?
Ivy Young is a final-year student whose only goal is to study hard, earn top grades, and secure a scholarship to college. Her life is carefully planned, and everything is going exactly the way she wants until she crosses paths with the school’s bad boy, Romeo Sparks.
Everything changes the night she attends a party and ends up in a game of Truth or Dare with him. The challenge is cruel and impossible to ignore: let Romeo take her first kiss or agree to date him for a whole month.
He is the school playboy. She is just a school nerd.
He is dangerous. He is reckless. And he's too bad for Ivy.
Kayla is a smart, focused, top-mark student in her last two senior years of high school in a private facility for rich kids in Florida. All she wants is to get accepted to Harvard and graduate with top marks to follow the career she has set for herself. Her entire life is about becoming an independent and successful vet. She has micro-managed it and planned it to the tiniest detail. Leaving no room for a social life or living her teen years like her peers.
This year has had its ups and downs, with her stepbrother of almost ten years coming to live under the same roof after being raised apart after their parents married. The chaos and drama his appearance has brought since he despises not only his father but Kayla's mother too, has made home tense. He's a rude, defiant, and arrogant pain in her ass who is hellbent on causing trouble and listens to no one.
Dane is the polar opposite in every way - Vain, oversexed, a playboy who takes nothing seriously except booze, girls, and his motorbike while he rebels in every way against his father for ripping apart his family. Looking like a teen idol, acting like someone who doesn't need to take accountability for anything in his life, Kayla honestly cannot stand him. She sees a loser who will live on daddy's money and drink away his youth while sleeping with every girl in the county.
At 17, they have known one another most of their lives and never had any kind of friendly relationship. They have always been classmates but never friends and definitely not siblings. - but all that is about to change.
The women in Brianne Montgomery’s family have a curse that compels them to marry before the age of thirty-one, and she wasn't going to be the first one to break it.
Her life seemed perfecThe only thing she hated about her life was Travis Cross—her brother’s annoying best friend.
Travis made a lifetime promise to take care of Brianne for the rest of his life. He promised to be her safety guy to save her from the family curse.
Soon, their once hateful relationship turned into an unbreakable bond of love and friendship.
However, their dependent and comfortable relationship would always be complicated because of the yearning inside Travis that craved Brianne like a drug. And Brianne struggled to stay immune to his charms. She had already lost so much, and Travis had become the most important thing she couldn’t afford to gamble with.
This romance follows Travis and Brianne's lives from the age of sixteen to adulthood and how they dealt with family, teen peer pressure, marriage and breakups… all of which make up their deep and unbreakable connection: A relationship so beautiful, they’re afraid to risk it for anything… not even for love itself.
Amara Bennett has a rule:
Never let anyone close enough to break your heart twice.
After a humiliating breakup that turned her into the laughingstock of her school, she’s done with romance, done with hope, and definitely done with boys who make promises they can’t keep.
Then Julian Reyes transfers into her class.
Charming without trying. Annoyingly kind. The type of boy who remembers little things—like how she hates strawberries on cake and how she always pretends she’s okay when she isn’t.
At first, Amara can’t stand him.
Mostly because Julian somehow sees through every wall she built around herself.
But when a misunderstanding makes the entire school believe they’re dating, Julian offers her a deal: fake a relationship until the rumors die down.
Simple.
Except nothing about Julian feels fake.
Not the way he waits outside her classroom just to walk her home.
Not the way his hand finds hers during crowded hallways.
And definitely not the way he looks at her like she’s the best thing he’s ever found.
For the first time in a long time, Amara begins to believe love might not be something meant to hurt her.
But just when she finally lets herself fall, she discovers the truth Julian has been hiding since the day they met—a truth that could destroy everything between them.
Because Julian didn’t transfer to her school by coincidence.
He came for her.