Let's be honest, everyone talks about the love triangle, but the key dynamic is really between the two brothers. Conrad's withdrawal after his mom's diagnosis and Jeremiah stepping into the void explains so much of the tension—it's not just about who likes Belly more. She's stuck in the middle of their unresolved family stuff. I always found Belly's tendency to view them as symbols of her perfect summer rather than real, messed-up guys to be the point the book makes painfully clear by the end. Susannah's looming absence casts a shadow over every single one of their interactions, making the petty jealousies feel small and the real connections feel huge.
Belly, Conrad, and Jeremiah are the core trio. Susannah's illness is the pivotal event that changes everything for them. The parents, Laurel and Steven, provide context, but the book's pulse is in those three teenagers navigating a summer where everything shifts.
Most summaries I've seen zero in on the triangle between Belly, Conrad, and Jeremiah, which makes sense because the series is named after her, but I think Susannah gets short shrift. Her friendship with Laurel and her illness form the emotional bedrock of the whole story—without that ache, the boys' grief and Belly's coming-of-age don't land the same way. Laurel's there as the practical counterpoint, trying to keep her daughter grounded while wrestling with her own feelings about Susannah.
Steven, Belly's brother, is often just the comic relief, but his relationship with Taylor and his own awkward attempts at romance add a necessary layer of normal teenage chaos outside the intense Fisher orbit. Cam, the sweet outsider Belly briefly dates, matters because he shows there's a world outside the summer house, a choice she consciously rejects.
Belly Conklin is obviously the center; we see Cousins Beach and the Fisher brothers through her eyes as she grapples with feeling unseen then suddenly being seen too much. Conrad Fisher is the brooding, complicated oldest son she's always idolized, while Jeremiah is his sunnier, more approachable brother who becomes a real friend. Their mother Susannah is Belly's mom's best friend and the heart of the summer house. Belly's own mom Laurel and her brother Steven round out the main family unit. Taylor, Belly's friend, pops in with a different energy.
2026-06-27 10:39:50
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I was more than pretty
Onyes
10
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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.
Keisha Peterson has her senior year all planned out, she is going to study to get good grades for college, do everything in her power to make her crush notice her and also have a fun-filled year. But all her plans is crushed when he walks back into her life unexpectedly.
Jake Hawkins, her best friend who had disappeared without a word years ago. The boy she once had a huge crush on but now hates with every fiber of her being. When he returns, he has become ten times hotter, taller, and annoyingly charming. Somehow, he is everywhere she turns.
Just when Keisha starts to have a chance with her new crush, fate throws her into a whirlwind of confusion, secrets, and unexpected painful truths.
Why is Jake suddenly acting like he never broke her?
Why does her heart still race when he's near?
And why does it seem like the more she was trying to hate him, the more she became attracted to him?
Will she be able to accept the truth when she finds out? Will she be able to keep hating him or finally give in to her true feelings?
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?
Ari expected another quiet summer at her family’s beach house—long days of swimming, lazy nights by the fire, and harmless chaos with her brother. But when the boy's next door returns—steady and guarded, wild and unpredictable—everything shifts. A story of reckless nights, hidden glances, and a love that refuses to stay buried—Where the Summer Wind Blows will sweep you into a summer you won’t forget.
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.
I never really cared about the concept of virginity.
All I wanted was to get fucked but the question now is by who?
Her, him or both?
There’s one person I’ve wanted my whole life.
The problem? I’m not supposed to want her.
This summer someone wants to destroy me. Good, let them try.
Now it’s time to flip the tables.
I guess we’ll never know but all I know is that this time around? I’ll be fucking reborn.
Some girls lose their innocence. I’m about to lose everything… while enjoying every second of it.
The cast of 'This Summer I Turned Pretty' feels like a group of friends I’ve known forever—there’s something so relatable about their messy, emotional summers. Belly Conklin is the heart of it all, a girl caught between childhood and adulthood, navigating first loves and family dynamics. Her childhood crush, Conrad Fisher, is the broody, mysterious older brother who’s got this quiet intensity that makes you ache for him. Then there’s Jeremiah, Conrad’s younger brother, who’s all sunshine and charm but hides his own vulnerabilities. Susannah Fisher, their mom, brings this warmth and tragic beauty to the story, while Laurel, Belly’s mom, balances her with sharp wit and deep love. Steven, Belly’s brother, is the comic relief but also surprisingly layered. The show (and books) really dig into how these characters grow and collide, especially during those transformative summer months.
What I love is how nobody’s perfect—Conrad’s moodiness, Belly’s impulsiveness, Jeremiah’s people-pleasing—it all feels so human. And the way the Fisher house becomes this almost magical setting for their tangled relationships? Chef’s kiss. The series captures that bittersweet feeling of summers where everything changes, and these characters embody it perfectly.
Jenny Han's 'The Summer I Turned Pretty' is basically a coming-of-age love triangle set over a few pivotal beach vacations. The main plot follows Belly Conklin, who's spent every summer at Cousins Beach with her mom, her brother Steven, and her mom's best friend Susannah and her two sons, Conrad and Jeremiah Fisher. This particular summer, she's sixteen and feels like she's finally become 'pretty,' and suddenly the dynamic with the brothers, who she's always idolized, shifts dramatically. It's not just about romance, though. A huge undercurrent is Susannah's recurring cancer, which casts a shadow over everything and forces all the characters to confront grief, change, and the fragility of their perfect summer world.
What I always liked was how the plot isn't just 'which brother will she choose?' It's about Belly trying to step out of being the little kid sister figure and be seen as herself, while also dealing with this impending loss that threatens to dissolve the only constant in her life. The tension between Conrad's brooding, closed-off nature and Jeremiah's sunny, approachable personality mirrors her own internal conflict between a childhood crush and a potential new, easier love. The whole book feels like the last golden hour of a long day, sweet but with the chill of evening coming on.