We'll Always Have Summer
by Jenny Han · The Summer I Turned Pretty #3
A bittersweet YA romance about choosing between comfortable love and authentic love
The story
College freshman Belly has been dating Jeremiah Fisher for two years, but when a betrayal rocks their relationship and his brother Conrad reappears in her life, she must confront feelings she has been suppressing. Set over one pivotal summer at the family beach house, the trilogy's conclusion forces an impossible choice between two kinds of love.
Age verdict
Best for ages 14-17. The emotional maturity required to process the moral complexity of the love triangle and its resolution makes this most rewarding for high school readers. Younger teens (13) can handle the reading level but may miss the nuance.
Our take
Emotionally rich YA romance that parents value for its sophisticated handling of complex feelings and moral questions. Stronger on emotional depth and writing craft than on entertainment value or classroom utility.
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Character voice Strong
Comparable to City Spies , triangulated with The Golem's Eye -- Belly's first-person voice is distinctly hers with specific emotional registers. Three brothers (Conrad, Jeremiah, Steven) each have recognizably distinct voices through dialogue and action. Exceeds tier 7; sits at tier 8.
- Heart-punch Strong
Belly's conflicting feelings, forgiveness arcs, and relationship complexity create multiple earned emotional peaks. Sits at tier 8.
Parents love
- Emotional sophistication Exceptional
Comparable to The Remarkable Journey of Coyote Sunrise — Emotional safety is exceptionally strong. Complex feelings (love, betrayal, forgiveness) held without oversimplification. Characters experience contradictory emotions simultaneously with sophisticated handling. Tier 9.
- Writing quality Strong
Comparable to 5 Worlds Book 1 , triangulated with A Snicker of Magic — Han's prose demonstrates genuine sentence-level control and emotional precision in depicting romantic confusion and family tension. Sits at tier 7.
Teachers love
- Discussion fuel Strong
Comparable to Fantastic Mr Fox — Central question about forgiveness and trust generates genuine disagreement. Relationship ethics open multiple student viewpoints. Sits at tier 7.
- Empathy & self-awareness Strong
Comparable to Breakout — Three female protagonists with distinct perspectives (Belly, Taylor, Lena) force genuine perspective-taking. Students inhabit multiple viewpoints and emotional contexts. Sits at tier 7.
✓ Perfect for
- • Teen readers who love emotionally complex contemporary romance
- • Fans of the Amazon Prime TV adaptation looking for the original story
- • Readers who want a love triangle resolved with honesty rather than a villain
- • Teens processing complicated feelings about relationships and identity
Not ideal for
Readers who prefer action-driven plots, fantasy worlds, or humor-centered stories. Also not ideal for readers under 13 or those uncomfortable with themes of infidelity and romantic tension. Requires reading the first two books in the trilogy.
⚠ Heads up
At a glance
- Pages
- 291
- Chapters
- 58
- Words
- 65k
- Lexile
- 570L
- Difficulty
- Moderate
- POV
- Alternating
- Illustration
- None
- Published
- 2011
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Trilogy conclusion with definitive resolution and satisfying epilogue. No cliffhanger.
If your kid loved "We'll Always Have Summer"
Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.
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