Member Review

Cover Image: Love on the Brain

Love on the Brain

Pub Date:

Review by

Chelsea Z, Reviewer

Thank you, Berkley and NetGalley for the eARC!

I very much enjoyed Ali Hazelwood's The Love Hypothesis, but I absolutely devoured Love on the Brain. There are definite similarities between the two, but while TLH was inspired by the Reylo fandom, LOTB took a page out of "You've Got Mail."

It's cute, it's awkward, it's at times so sugary sweet I feel like I'm getting a cavity, but at other times it's deeply emotional and relatable. It's an endearing, heartwarming love story set in the STEM world, with badass, role model women who carry the torch for each other and daily honor the female scientists who blazed a trail before them.

Bee is the quirky, purple-haired, tattooed genius I want to be when I grow up - if I was any good at science. She lands a dream job helping lead a team of scientists and engineers at NASA. But, her co-lead is Levi Ward, the guy she considers her archnemesis from grad school, and who she thinks absolutely despises her. Spoiler alert: He doesn't hate her; (*feigns shock*) he's actually in love with her and has been for years.

Cue awkward encounters, intense and loaded looks, and (eventually) some seriously steamy moments in the heat of scientific discovery.

All the best tropes are present: enemies to lovers, miscommunication, colleagues to lovers, and a bit of mystery/espionage/politics involving NASA. All of the main characters are so loveable, and the banter between them is grounded, authentic, and at times laugh-out-loud funny.

It was so fun to read this story from Bee's POV and basically get to explore her brain in all its nerdy, eccentric, vegan, cat-loving, self-deprecating glory. Her journey was especially beautiful as she went from being closed all to almost any type of friend or romantic relationship to creating an unlikely family of her own.

Some of the drawbacks were the cliche tropes: Levi is, of course, a massive muscly man with a huge you-know-what. At times, he can read as one-dimensional, and at other times he's so much "the perfect man" that it veers into fantasy. And some of the miscommunication seems unrealistic, especially with the awkwardness of both Levi and Bee thinking the other person is married.

But overall, Love on the Brain showcases the best of Ali Hazelwood's love stories with sugar, spice, and everything STEM.
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