Scan barcode
A review by nikkihrose
Love on the Brain by Ali Hazelwood
5.0
Anything Ali Hazelwood writes I will devour, purchase, and devour again.
If you are looking for a woman in STEM, enemies to lovers, workplace romance — seriously look no further. This one has all of that, and far more.
If you’re someone who wanted more spice after reading The Love Hypothesis? Know that Ali heard you and brought it to the table.
If you’re looking for a strong female protagonist who is willing to fight for what she needs in the workplace, this is the book for you.
But I will say, the last thing Bee expected was to have to work with her grad school nemesis as co-leaders on a project. And when all of her materials start going missing – or never show up to begin with, she starts blaming the only person she believes to be responsible…until she learns that the very person she’s blaming might be the only one in her corner.
This book also had a hilarious streak of social media anonymity … the concept of turning to Twitter to be your quippy, geeky self while asking the question Bee chooses to live by: What Would Marie Curie Do? And things take a turn when people discover who’s behind the Marie Curie account she runs.
Such a fun, heated book! I’m already excited to reread it.
Tropes: enemies to lovers, workplace romance, women in STEM
If you are looking for a woman in STEM, enemies to lovers, workplace romance — seriously look no further. This one has all of that, and far more.
If you’re someone who wanted more spice after reading The Love Hypothesis? Know that Ali heard you and brought it to the table.
If you’re looking for a strong female protagonist who is willing to fight for what she needs in the workplace, this is the book for you.
But I will say, the last thing Bee expected was to have to work with her grad school nemesis as co-leaders on a project. And when all of her materials start going missing – or never show up to begin with, she starts blaming the only person she believes to be responsible…until she learns that the very person she’s blaming might be the only one in her corner.
This book also had a hilarious streak of social media anonymity … the concept of turning to Twitter to be your quippy, geeky self while asking the question Bee chooses to live by: What Would Marie Curie Do? And things take a turn when people discover who’s behind the Marie Curie account she runs.
Such a fun, heated book! I’m already excited to reread it.
Tropes: enemies to lovers, workplace romance, women in STEM