REVIEW: Love, Theoretically (Ali Hazelwood)
Book: Love, Theoretically
Author: Ali Hazelwood
Premise: By day, Elsie is an adjunct professor, teaching thermodynamics. By night, she makes up for her non-existent paycheck by offering her services as a fake girlfriend. But these two worlds come crashing together when she discoverd the annoyingly attractive and arrogant older brother of her favourite client stands between her and her dream job.
Sometimes, you want a deep, chunky read that makes you question the meaning of life. And sometimes you're just in the mood for a cosy, steminist romance. This book had all that I wanted and expected from this genre.
We have Elsie, a physicist who is a serial people pleaser, and Jack, a physicist who doesn't care what people think. She hates him because of an article he once wrote and assumes he hates her too. They're drawn to each other and soon she realises she had it wrong the whole time and she doesn't have to pretend around him. A classic plot structure but one I lap up time and again!