At the end of 'The Summer I Turned Pretty', Belly chooses Conrad over Jeremiah after a summer of messy emotions and complicated relationships. It's not a clean, easy decision—there's pain and confusion, especially for Jeremiah, who truly loved her. But Conrad and Belly have this magnetic pull that's been there since the beginning, and in the end, she follows her heart. The beach house is gone, symbolizing how nothing stays the same, but there's a sense that Belly is ready to move forward. She's grown up, and so have the boys. It's a classic coming-of-age ending—happy, but with scars.
The ending of 'The Summer I Turned Pretty' wraps up Belly's emotional journey in a way that feels both satisfying and bittersweet. After a summer filled with love triangles, family drama, and personal growth, Belly finally makes her choice between Conrad and Jeremiah. She realizes that while both Fisher brothers have been important to her, her heart truly belongs to Conrad. Their relationship has always been complicated, but there's a deep, undeniable connection between them that even time and distance can't erase. The final scenes show them reconciling on the beach, with Conrad finally opening up about his feelings, and Belly embracing the uncertainty of their future together.
What makes the ending so poignant is how it handles the theme of growing up. Belly isn't the same girl who arrived at Cousins Beach at the beginning of the summer. She's learned hard lessons about love, loss, and the impermanence of things. The Fisher family's beach house, which has been a constant in her life, is sold, symbolizing the end of an era. But there's hope, too. Belly and Conrad's relationship isn't perfect, but it's real, and that's what matters. The book leaves you with this warm, nostalgic feeling, like you've just lived through the most intense summer of your life alongside these characters.
2025-07-01 06:13:55
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I was more than pretty
Onyes
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They said I was beautiful — but not real.
That my smile was perfect — but my past made me broken.
I spent years trying to prove I was more than the girl who changed her face to survive the world’s cruelty.
I married Julian Vale, believing love would finally see me.
I called Serena Blake my sister, trusting her more than my own reflection.
And when my world collapsed under secrets, silence, and the weight of never being enough — I disappeared.
Then I opened my eyes…
Ten years earlier.
Before the surgery.
Before the vows.
Before I forgot who I was beneath the makeup and the mask of confidence.
This time, I don’t need to be fixed.
This time, I don’t need to be forgiven.
I remember every lie. Every betrayal. Every time I silenced my voice to keep the peace.
So I’m not here to win back love.
I’m not here to punish the past.
I’m here to become the woman I was always meant to be —
unedited, unafraid, and finally, completely seen.
I was more than pretty.
This time, I’ll live like I believe it.
This summer, Louela realizes the heat isn’t the only thing that’s irresistible—so is her ex-boyfriend’s youger brother.
--
After graduating college, Louela returns to her hometown for a well-deserved summer break. She plans to spend a carefree month with family, finally free from the pressures of school. But her relaxing getaway takes an unexpected turn when she reunites with Ivan—her ex-boyfriend’s younger brother.
The once adorably grumpy little kid she used to tease has grown into a dangerously charming man, one who seems determined to catch her attention. Now, the summer heat isn’t the only thing making her breathless.
Can Louela resist Ivan’s relentless charm, or will this summer become wilder than she ever expected?
Nathan and Lily fell in love during the summer before there senior year. Nathan is the bad boy of his school and the only reason he is passing is because he and his friends bully people into doing there work. Lily is a straight A student who has very few friends. They met by accident in the beginning of the summer before there Senior year. Everything was perfect during the summer until it wasn't. She wanted to tell everyone they were dating but Nathan cared more about his reputation. Lily broke off things with him not wanting to get hurt. Despite saying he didn't want to ruin his reputation he completely changed the way he acts at school to be near her. Will he realize just how much he loves her. Will she take him back once she realizes how much he loves her.
It’s all fun and games until a body washes up….
Beth Monroe just wants to make it through the summer baseball season without being the constant target of her brother Shane’s jokes, but he is relentless, and she’s ready to lock herself in her room and hide.
Until the new girl shows up.
Halley appears in small town Barryville like a ghost. No one knows where she came from or anything about her past, not even her last name. When she gives Beth a piece of unsolicited advice that, “It’s what’s on the outside that counts,” Beth changes everything about herself.
By the time Beth realizes she’s becoming a monster, it might be too late, and Halley has already sunk her claws into Beth’s best friend Ryan—who might’ve been something more if Beth had opened her eyes a little earlier.
As Halley’s past catches up to her, Beth realizes there’s more to this mysterious girl than she realized. Can she stop Halley from revealing her true, monstrous nature to Ryan before it’s too late?
High School Love! It all starts with the good girl meeting the bad boy and falling in love with him, fighting the battles together, letting out deepest secrets and at the end of the day, they live happily ever after! But is that really it? What happens AFTER!After getting each other's heart.After fighting for each other.After the whole mushy and cliche love.After all the promises.After high school. Just After!
When Henry made a deal with his best friend to make their school's notable Ice Bitch– August, fall in love, he didn't expect that he'd come to respect her instead. And just when he wanted out of the bet, the Ice Bitch found him and made a counter offer. Now with August in his team, the two of them set out an elaborate plan to make their peers believe that the original bet was still in motion. But what started as an easy mission turned complicated when even their own hearts got entangled in very real emotions to what was supposed to be a very fake scheme.
I recently read 'The Summer I Turned Pretty' by Jenny Han, and it's this beautiful coming-of-age story that perfectly captures the bittersweetness of growing up. The book follows Belly, a girl who spends every summer at Cousins Beach with her mom and her mom's best friend Susannah, along with Susannah's sons Conrad and Jeremiah. This particular summer is different because Belly starts to see herself and the boys in a new light—especially Conrad, the broody older brother she's always had a crush on. The story is full of nostalgia, first loves, and the complicated dynamics of family and friendship. There's drama, heartbreak, and those little moments that make summer feel magical. The way Jenny Han writes about emotions is so raw and real—it’s impossible not to get swept up in Belly’s world.
In 'The Summer I Turned Pretty', the ending leans into bittersweet optimism rather than pure happiness. Belly’s journey is messy—she grapples with first love, loss, and growing up, but ultimately finds closure. Conrad’s emotional walls crumble, Jeremiah matures, and Belly makes a choice that feels right for her, even if it leaves some wounds unhealed. The Fisher boys’ mother, Susannah, remains a ghostly presence, reminding them—and us—that joy and grief coexist. The finale isn’t wrapped in a neat bow; it’s raw, real, and hopeful in its imperfections.
What makes it satisfying is how it mirrors life. Relationships aren’t resolved with grand gestures but through quiet understanding. Belly doesn’t 'win' love; she earns it by confronting her flaws. The beach house, a symbol of endless summers, stays in the family, promising new beginnings. It’s happy-ish—more about growth than fairy tales, which might resonate deeper with readers who crave authenticity over fluff.
The ending of 'The Summer I Turned Pretty' throws a lot at Belly, but the way Jenkins Reid leaves it is more about emotional chaos than neat closure. After the whole messy love triangle with Conrad and Jeremiah, the summer ends with Conrad basically telling her he doesn't want her. It’s a gut punch, especially after all their tense moments. But the book isn't really about who she ends up with in that moment. It's about her realizing her childhood crush on Conrad was just that—a childhood thing. She starts seeing him, and herself, more clearly.
Honestly, the summary of the ending I read made it sound simpler than it felt. The last pages have this quiet melancholy as they all leave the summer house. Belly's growing up, and the summer where everything changed is officially over. It sets up the next books perfectly because you're left wondering how these relationships can possibly mend, or if they even should.