Member Reviews
Oh my word, friends. I may have found your next favourite romance. I was so incredibly invested in How to End a Love Story by Yulin Kuang. I couldn’t stop thinking about this debut romance when I wasn’t reading it. It is so angsty and so real with a Happily Ever After that had a lot of roadblocks in its way. It was emotional and wonderful.
Here’s the book’s description:
Helen Zhang hasn’t seen Grant Shepard once in the thirteen years since the tragic accident that bound their lives together forever.
Now a bestselling author, Helen pours everything into her career. She’s even scored a coveted spot in the writers’ room of the TV adaptation of her popular young adult novels, and if she can hide her imposter syndrome and overcome her writer’s block, surely the rest of her life will fall into place too. LA is the fresh start she needs. After all, no one knows her there. Except…
Grant has done everything in his power to move on from the past, including building a life across the country. And while the panic attacks have never quite gone away, he’s well liked around town as a screenwriter. He knows he shouldn’t have taken the job on Helen’s show, but it will open doors to developing his own projects that he just can’t pass up.
Grant’s exactly as Helen remembers him—charming, funny, popular, and lovable in ways that she’s never been. And Helen’s exactly as Grant remembers too—brilliant, beautiful, closed off. But working together is messy, and electrifying, and Helen’s parents, who have never forgiven Grant, have no idea he’s in the picture at all.
When secrets come to light, they must reckon with the fact that theirs was never meant to be any kind of love story. And yet… the key to making peace with their past—and themselves—might just lie in holding on to each other in the present.
You should want to read this book just based on the description (and the fact that I’m telling you you should, ha!), but if you want some more encouragement: Kuang is the screenwriter who is bringing Emily Henry’s novels from page to screen. You like Henry’s books, right? Throw in some more emotional angst, and you get Kuang’s novel. You’re in for a treat. (And I’m also even more excited for Henry's novels' adaptations now!)
Knowing that Kuang is a screenwriter made the story feel even more real, given the plot revolved around Grant and Helen adapting Helen’s novel for TV. Funnily enough, though, I couldn’t picture this book as a movie or TV show. You know how sometimes you can clearly see how a book would translate to screen? I didn’t get that with this one. It’s perfect as a book. And I really liked the little peek into the world of screenwriting. It was fairly in depth without being overwhelming or boring.
Helen and Grant’s background is…a lot. It wasn’t insurmountable but a lot of therapy was going to need to be involved, which Kuang made sure to talk about in a positive light. Both of them had been going to therapy but clearly still needed some more help to get past the traumatic experience that tied them together so many years before. I don’t know what I would have done in their position but, let me tell you, I was feeling all the things while reading as they figured it out. Holy emotional. In the best way! Well, terribly difficult and awful emotions but done well in the book. Just…have tissues next to you and be kind to yourself when you read this one. (I’ll put the content warnings I personally noticed down at the bottom of this review.)
I felt the characters of Helen and Grant were well-developed and I was fully invested in their lives. I needed them to work out their issues so they could be together but I didn’t know how they’d get there. Thanks to Kuang’s writing, I felt like I had a front row seat to their relationship but also to their careers. Figuring out their professional lives was more important to them, Helen especially, than whatever romantic feelings were being stirred up. It was the kind of balance I crave in romances and was so glad Kuang hit the right notes.
I absolutely loved How to End a Love Story by Yulin Kuang. This debut novel had me feeling all the feelings in the best way. I cannot wait to see what else Kuang writes.
Content warnings: grief, suicide, panic attacks, death of a family member, car accident
*An egalley was provided by the Canadian publisher, HarperCollins Canada, via NetGalley in exchange for review consideration. All opinions are honest and my own.*
An absolutely brilliant debut that lives up to the hype – highly recommended for anyone interested in elevated, literary romance!
Grant and Helen were well-drawn, believable characters on their own, but their connection wasn't realistic at all. The writers' room relationships and banter were the strongest parts, and Helen's grief was thoughtfully explored, but the romance was the weakest element.
I finished How to End a Love Story today. I could have finished it last night, but I wanted the story to keep going so I made myself stop to savor it. 5 stars for this debut from Yulin Kuang, who is actually a screenwriter herself (like her book's main characters) and is adapting some of Emily Henry's work for the big screen!
The book begins at the main character's sister's funeral. Warning that if you have lost someone in your life to suicide, this book deals with the fallout on a family from losing a child to suicide. Fast forward 13 years, and the main character is thrust into forced proximity (via work) with the very man who played an unwitting role in her sister's suicide.
I honestly loved the angst in this book - the slow build up to a relationship between the two main characters, and how we get to live in both of their heads. You root for them, but you also know nothing can happen long-term with them, because of who they are to each other. There was some gorgeous prose in this book as well - I found myself underlining lines more than usual when reading.
I will say I found the beginning of this book slow. It wasn't a must-pick-up-and-keep-reading for me until about 50% of the way through, when suddenly I couldn't put it down. However, the payoff was worth it! I'm looking forward to reading more from this author in the future. Thanks to NetGalley for the ARC!
Yulin Kuang's How to End a Love Story is a gripping and emotional story of love, loss, and second chances. Helen Zhang and Grant Shepard, two writers with a complicated past, find themselves working together on a TV show, forcing them to confront their history and the feelings they thought they had buried. The writing is both sexy and emotional, drawing readers in with its raw and authentic portrayal of love and forgiveness. What sets this book apart is its depth of character development. Helen and Grant are flawed and complex, making their story all the more relatable and heart wrenching. As they navigate their past and present, the author delves into themes of forgiveness, redemption, and the power of love to heal old wounds.
Absolutely head over heels in love with this book. I want to crawl into bed and hug this book to my chest and cry and sleep for the next 6-8 months I loved it so much. Beautiful, wonderful, amazing. I can’t even try to consolidate all my feelings for it into a cohesive review. How can a book that had me weeping, wailing, sobbing one minute also have me panting and pacing my kitchen SCREAMING and sweating reading the smutty scenes in the next. The RANGE is unprecedented.
It is art. High art. I’m starting it again as we speak. Pressing play.
rating: 4 stars
this book is like sexy black lace and i couldn’t love it more.
the chemistry between helen & grant? totured, palpable, electric.
the writing? absolutely sublime. like SO well done. everything is done on purpose. yulin kuang shifts seamlessly from grant to helen and back again. i usually prefer 1st person POV but this book has me rethinking everything. probably one of the best 3rd person POV books i have ever read.
given this yulin is a screenwriter, this does kind of read like a movie in some parts and it made for such a vivid experience.
i wished i could reach through the page and hug these characters. some of the lines grant delivered? i was on. the. floor. don’t even get me started on the scene where he writes his address ON HER INNER THIGH. top 5 romance book scenes of all-time. i squeaked.
HIGHLY highly recommend everyone read this. be prepared to feel big feelings. this is not a light & fluffy book.
Really you would think Helen Zhang has it all. Writing a best seller, selling the rights to a TV adaptation for her book and getting to be in the writer's room to help craft her vision in this other medium. But back in high school her sister died by jumping in front of a car. A car driven by the prom king, Grant. And the same boy, now man, who is in the aforementioned writer's room. So many levels and undercurrents here. How her sister's death has closed her off emotionally. Dealing with her immigrant parents overall, but especially how none of them have moved on her the death. Oh yeah, and there's the love story and the connection between Helen and Grant. And the interesting details of the writer's room. A there's a lot going on in this book. And I really enjoyed it, but I didn't love it as I had hoped to do. And that's because I couldn't warm up to Helen. While her reactions are true and intrinsic to her character, she's so different me and my friends I could only react to her intellectually, not emotionally
I’m definitely on the unpopular opinion side of this! But just something about the plot made this book “meh” instead of memorable. The writing is so good though, like I definitely will read another book from this author for sure! But this plot was just…weird. The whole woman-falls-in-love with someone she shouldn’t thing is just so…not the target age of readers I would expect this book to be for? Idk it’s weird. That plus just a more unrealistic type of love story just had me not loving this as much as I thought I would!
This one absolutely blew me away. I heard about this book when Yulin was a guest on the Fated Mates Podcast and I was intrigued. And I was not disappointed. It had me absolutely sobbing at some parts (a sign of a good book for me), and then had me kicking my feet at other parts. I loved that the premise was messy and that the characters felt so real. I will definitely be thinking about this one for awhile.
How to End a Love Story by Yulin Kuang makes me feel confident in the upcoming Emily Henry movies. If Yulin Kuang can write this, they can do EmHen justice.
What a great read. I loved the characters, their backstory, their relationships with their parents, and their friends. Helen's insistence that their relationship was over, combined with the title of the book, made me think I wasn't going go get a happily-ever-after, but I'm glad I did. Thanks for sharing this book with me!
Unfortunately, this one was not for me. I found the alternating POVs a bit hard to follow and didn't love the whole romance rooted in trauma trope (if that even is one). It was also too insta-love for me, and I couldn't understand how the main characters fell in love.
Ok so back in 2018, I pitched a VERY similar book concept by the title of "This Is Where I Leave You" to agents in Dayton, OH. Weirdly enough, this book is pretty much the same concept, and the main character writes a story on it called "Here's Where I Leave You." I can't objectively review this because I am wracking my brain at how this could've happened coincidentally.
I've heard a lot about this book and it definitely did not disappoint! Helen and Grant were two dynamic and exciting characters. The dialogue was fun and flirty and never boring. The story itself was really interesting, I hadn't read a romance that handled complicated grief like this one did. I loved learning more about the screenwriting process, and about adapting books into shows (especially after learning that Yulin Kuang is adapting Emily Henry's books). There was so much to love about this book, it's kind of hard to articulate it. Both Grant and Helen's families felt like fully formed characters who weren't just there to move the plot along, which I feel like can sometimes happen in romances. I think it was really nice to see the differences between the families, especially since neither was 'typical'. It was enjoyable to see Grant and Helen go back to their hometown and interact with people from their high school. It made me nostalgic. Also, I'm from Westfield, New Jersey, so it was kind of neat to see it mentioned a few times. Thanks to Avon and NetGalley for this ARC!
this was a weird book.
it uses the word vague a lot, and it loves to murmur. it has a lot of italics, for no real discernible reason. there's a whole scene where it seems like it might be sponsored by scrivener?
more seriously, it creates a very troubled romance with very troubled characters and puts them in a love story it will take 300 pages to untangle into something resembling a happily ever after, except we never really get to their individual personal issues. helen never makes real friendships, and grant doesn't either. parental relationships are left unresolved. they get back together, but the why feels unsolved at best.
it also relies on chemistry instead of intimacy, with a lot more sex scenes than romantic ones.
but there were moments it was really yearn-y, and really promising. i'd probably read another book by this author.
I can see why Yulin Kuang was hired to adapt Emily Henry's books; both authors are adept at creating beautiful romances from honest, vulnerable portrayals of grief and trauma. Truthfully, I was less convinced by Helen and Grant's romance and insta-lust than I thought I'd be (though the forced proximity helps here), but their chemistry is visceral enough to make them intriguing. I also appreciated that both acknowledge the amount of healing they had to do from Michelle's suicide.
This one feels a bit difficult to review. It deals with a few heavy topics including but not limited to panic attacks, death of a loved one, suicide, and familial expectations. It didn't feel like a straightforward romance, but one that straddled the line of: romance and what might be categorized as general or woman's fiction.
I did enjoy this one overall. I liked how Grant and Helen slowly opened up to each other. Helen had good character growth which I appreciated, while I wanted a bit more from Grant. While this story is told in dual-points-of-view it definitely felt more like Helen's story as a whole and her journey.
I listened to a good portion of it on audiobook, and while I enjoyed the female narrator, I had a bit of trouble with the male narrator – but I am notoriously picky when it comes to narrators! It sounded to me like he was saying everything almost angrily, even when that wasn't Grant's mood or intention, so it threw me off. So I found I enjoyed Grant's POV sections much more when I was reading them rather than listening.
Anyway, I'm looking forward to seeing what Yulin puts out next!
Absolutely adored this, no notes! I loved these characters and the depth this story had, while still being swoony and laced with emotion.
Absolutely fun, well-written, with plenty of angst and comedy. I love the characters and found them easily relatable. A great debut.