Problematic Summer Romance is a friends-to-lovers romance/brother’s best friend romance, but it utilizes those tropes without any masculine over-protectiveness, which I appreciated. It’s also a romance that’s light on external conflict, but heavy on emotional growth, which was perfect for me.
Maya Killgore’s parents died when she was barely a teenager, leaving her to be raised by her overwhelmed brother (about fifteen years her senior). Said brother has an extremely lucrative biotech start up with his two friends. When Maya is away at college she has a bad breakup and calls her brother only to connect to one of his friend/partners Conor Harkness. Conor is nearby and comes to Maya’s emotional aid and it starts a friendship between the two that will last for three years.
This friendship involves emotionally vulnerable phone conversations into the wee hours of the night and some form of digital communication every single day. Then when Maya confronts Conor with the fact that she’s falling for him, he cuts contact completely citing their age difference (again about fifteen years) and the power dynamic as being too problematic for them to have a romantic relationship or even continue their friendship.
When the book opens, Maya’s brother is getting married in Sicily and she and Connor will both be attending the wedding, putting them in close proximity for a week. Maya is still in love with Conor and determined to make him see that a relationship with her could work.
First of all, I really liked how the book handled the age gap and the brother’s best friend trope. A lot of books would have the conflict surrounding the brother being over-protective and their relationship being forbidden. That never made sense to me since it implies the brother can’t trust the best friend (in which case why are you friends?) It also infantilizes the sister.
The fact that everyone here is treated as an adult with agency was really refreshing.
There’s not a lot of external conflict, but there is angst. All of the angst belongs to Conor. He grew up with a shitty, wealthy father who treated relationships like transactions. Said father also had a second marriage to a woman younger than his own children.
Conor feels like he’ll be following his father’s footsteps by dating a younger woman, and since his father taught him that all relationships are about power and money, he considers the fact that he’s wealthy to mean that he’s also in a more powerful, and therefore predatory position. (FWIW Maya’s brother is also wealthy and she has access to his money so that’s a moot point).
The book is condensed to the week of the wedding, plus some flashbacks.
Spoilers for time and conflict resolution
I think a week is a short enough time span that Conor’s emotional journey makes sense. Had this book spanned years it would have felt like he couldn’t get over himself, but the shorter timespan made it work.
Connor’s emotional journey felt genuine–he’s got a lot of shitty family stuff to unpack. It wasn’t just a “I’m a bad guy and I’m bad for you.” He had real work to do.
It would have been nice for Maya to have a little more growth versus just waiting for Connor to pull his head out of his butt.
…but honestly I’m in a mental place where I don’t need a ton of conflict right now. There are also some wedding shenanigans to lighten up the book since Conor’s navel gazing can get kinda dark, so that helped level out the narrative.
Problematic Summer Romance takes some fun romance tropes but presents them without toxicity, treating its main characters like adults who can make their own decisions. I loved Connor’s journey and would have liked more from Maya, but overall it worked for me.
Someone you know wants to read this, right?