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The Upside Of Falling -

An easy, bingeable read—perfect for a weekend or a flight. 👎 The Not-So-Good ✖️ Predictable plot If you’ve read any fake-dating YA, you’ll see most beats coming. That’s not a dealbreaker for fans of the trope, but don’t expect surprises.

The setup feels natural, and the progression from fake to real is believable. The chemistry builds slowly and sweetly. the upside of falling

Here’s a well-rounded review of by Alex Light, broken down by key elements. You can use this as-is or tailor it to your platform (Goodreads, blog, TikTok, etc.). ⭐ Overall Rating: 4/5 stars A sweet, lighthearted YA rom-com about fake dating, real feelings, and the courage to be yourself. 📖 Short Summary Becca Hart loves romance novels but has stopped believing in real-life love after her parents’ divorce. Brett Wells has it all—football captain, good looks, perfect family—but feels invisible under the pressure of everyone else’s expectations. When Becca overhears her ex mocking her for never having a boyfriend, she blurts out that she’s dating someone. Brett jumps in to save the moment, and suddenly they’re fake dating. But as the lines blur, both have to decide: is a made-up relationship worth becoming real? 👍 The Good ✔️ Sweet, low-angst romance This is the kind of book you read when you need a hug. No love triangles, no miscommunication dragged out for 300 pages—just two nice people falling for each other. An easy, bingeable read—perfect for a weekend or a flight

Becca is introverted, bookish, and guarded. Brett is the popular jock with hidden depth. Both feel authentic, and their vulnerabilities (Becca’s fear of abandonment, Brett’s pressure to be perfect) are handled with care. The setup feels natural, and the progression from

When conflicts arise, the characters actually talk to each other. It’s refreshing for a YA romance.

The book touches on parental divorce, emotional neglect, and social pressure, but it never dives too deep. Readers wanting heavier angst may find it too fluffy.