FRIENDS TO LOVERS
By Sally Blakely
On sale July 22, 2025
Canary Street Press Paperback Original
Price: $18.99
Buy Links:
HarperCollins https://www.harpercollins.com/products/friends-to-lovers-sally-blakely?variant=43119035678754
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1335014241
Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/friends-to-lovers-sally-blakely/1146285221
BookShop.org: https://bookshop.org/p/books/it-s-a-love-story/bc460262a45d2c41
Social Links:
Author Website: https://www.sallyblakely.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sally.blakely/
About the book: Always each other’s plus-ones, but never each other’s real dates, two childhood best friends have one last summer wedding to fall in love in this dual-narrative debut.
One of The Washington Post’s ‘8 Romance Novels to Read this
Summer’!
Best friends Joni and Ren have been inseparable since childhood. So when Joni
moves across the country for her job, the two devise a creative way to stay in
touch: they’ll be each other’s plus-ones every year for wedding season, no
matter what else is happening in their lives.
It’s a tradition that works, until a line is crossed and the friendship they
once thought was forever is ruined.
Now Joni is back at their families’ shared summer home for her sister’s
wedding, and she’s determined to make the week perfect, even if it means faking
a friendship with Ren—and avoiding the truth of why they have to fake it in the
first place. How hard can it be to pretend to be friends with the person who
once knew you best?
But as sunny beach days together turn into starry nights, Joni begins to
question what her life is without Ren in it. And when the wedding arrives,
bringing past heartaches to the surface, she’ll be forced to decide if loving
Ren means letting him go, or if theirs is a love story worth fighting for.
Perfect for fans of:
- The Summer I Turned Pretty and People
We Meet on Vacation
- Reunion romances
- Forced Proximity
- Dual narratives & Single POV
About the Author:
SALLY BLAKELY studied theatre, media arts, English, and education at The University of Montana. When she’s not writing, she’s reading, or making far too many playlists. She lives in Montana with her husband. Friends to Lovers is her first novel.
Excerpt:
SUNDAY
I pull up to the salt-weathered house late
Sunday afternoon, seagulls announcing themselves above and the ocean crashing
in far below. As I step out of the car, I suck in the Pacific Northwest air,
like it’s the first breath I’ve taken in two and a half years. It’s briny out
here on the coast, where the sky stretches endless and blue over water that
sparkles in tiny fractals, and where one week from now, my little sister will
be married under the red-roofed lighthouse that juts out from the green
headland a short walk away.
The trunk of the rental car heaves open
with a groan, a stark contrast to the perfect Oregon day. It’s fitting that my
return to the West Coast would not only be on the heels of losing my job, but
involve a dented Mazda that sounded like a freight train running off the tracks
the entire way from PDX. Coming back here was never going to be easy, but the
journey could have been a little kinder.
Inside, the house is largely the same. The
kitchen sits at the front, the long oak table that we can all fit around under
the windows. Through a small mudroom opposite are French doors leading to the
screen porch that runs along one side of
the house. When everyone else arrives the day
after tomorrow, there will be laughter rolling in from the yard, conversation
in the kitchen, music playing.
For now, there’s only silence.
I drop my car keys on the granite island
and walk my bags into the living room, where the sun streams in through the
floor-to-ceiling windows. I should go upstairs and unpack, start the week on a
responsible note, settle myself in before the others arrive. But a wave of all
the memories this place holds suddenly washes over me, and I find myself unable
to move another step. This house has seen me through so many versions of
myself, and this newest one feels like a stranger here, an intruder.
I brace myself. If I’m going to survive
this week, I need to pretend that I haven’t intentionally been staying away
these past few years. I take another deep breath, pour a glass of wine, and
fold my legs under me on the couch. It was this view of the ocean that sold my
parents and the Websters on the place when they purchased it together twenty
years ago. And now, with the familiar feel of the sun warming my shoulders, the
sight of the waves shimmering before me, that same view quiets my mind for the
first time in days.
MONDAY
I wake up the next morning sprawled face
down on top of the comforter, a dull throb behind my right eye. What started as
one glass of wine turned into three on the back deck as I watched the sun go
down over the ocean, curled under a well-loved Pendleton throw in one of the
Adirondack chairs out there.
I close my eyes again for a minute,
listening to the waves rolling in, enjoying the cool breeze drifting through
the window as it brushes across my neck.
And that’s when I hear the front door.
My eyes fly open. I sit up and scramble for
my phone, checking to see if Stevie has texted that she and her fiancé, Leo,
decided to head up early, but I don’t have any new messages. Still, it
wouldn’t be that unlike my sister to show up unannounced. I stand with
far too much confidence for a hungover woman alone in a coastal house, and
shuffle downstairs.
Just in case, in the living room, I pick up
a heavy geode from a sideboard and raise it above my head as I approach the
kitchen, ready to—what? Pummel someone at short range?
At the sound of keys being tossed onto the
counter, I lower
the rock, my heart slowing. “Hello?” I
call. “Stevie?” I poke my head through the door, catch sight of the person
turning at my voice.
It is not my sister.
At first, I think I might be making him up,
as if despite the energy I’ve spent repressing him since the second I stepped
foot inside this house, some memory managed to spring free and wander around
like a reminder of everything I’ve been missing. But this person is flesh and
blood, fully corporeal.
I take him in like there’s a curtain slowly
rising up to reveal him. Here are the long legs that used to bike around town
with me when we were kids, here are the forearms that used to lean against the
bar across from me, here are strong shoulders and here is a head of messy, dark
hair.
“Joni,” Ren says, my name familiar on his
lips. “Hi.”
I stare back at him. Dust particles catch
in the bands of light filtering in through the kitchen windows behind him like
he’s a particularly well-lit figure in an indie film. His gray T-shirt sits
against the tan of his arms, Wayfarers tucked into the front pocket.
I had one more day to get ready for this,
one more day to live in delusion that this moment might never come, that I
would never have to face him. The person who knows—knew—me better than
anyone in the world. The reason I’ve avoided Oregon for so long. I was going
to be cool, casual, act like nothing had changed between us while our families
were around and ignore him the rest of the time. I wasn’t going to be alone
with him.
If the vague nausea I was feeling before
was because of the wine I drank last night, now it is firmly due to the fact
that not only do I have to face him alone, but I have to do it pantsless, in
only a Portland Mavericks T-shirt that hangs partway down my thighs. As luck or
fate or the laughably unfair universe would have it, he’s here a day early,
wrecking my plans.
be here.” Obviously.
My eyes snag on the barely there lines that
frame the corners of his mouth, twin parentheses serving as proof of how much
joy I know can fill up his body. They deepen even when there’s just a hint of a
smile on his face. I used to chase them like I did his laugh. But Ren isn’t
smiling now.
“I’m sorry,” he says, in what might be the
most quintessentially Ren answer possible. He’s apologizing, like he really
did break into my personal vacation home. “I didn’t mean to startle you. I
would have called if—”
“No, it’s okay.” I hadn’t told anyone I’d
be here early, hadn’t wanted to alert them to the reason—the sudden and
dramatic end of a job I loved—behind my last-minute schedule change. There’s no
way Ren could have known I would be here. “What are you doing here?” I ask him.
It takes Ren a beat to answer. He reaches
up to either tug at his hair or rub at his neck, but he releases his arm at the
last second, settles his gaze on me. “I thought I’d head up before everyone
arrives tomorrow to get some things out of the way,” he says. “You know, mow
the lawn, clear the path down to the lighthouse, that sort of thing.”
Right. Ren would be here out of
selfless reasons. As Stevie’s maid of honor, I have a list of all the things
I’ll need to prepare for starting tomorrow, but Ren, helper that he is, is
diving in well before anyone even asks him to.
“Of course,” I say. “Same.”
“Your hair—” Ren says, and I glance up in
time to see him nodding toward me.
“Shorter,” I say, smoothing the back of my
hair, which just clears my shoulders, the only vestige of its former self my
bangs. I cut it a year ago, after Stevie told me hair holds memory or emotion
or something along those lines. I was willing to try anything to fill the hole
that had taken up residence in my life.
Climbing up my neck. His hair looks like
it’s been trimmed recently, but it’s still his usual style. His shoulders seem
like they might be broader under his T-shirt, but he’s always been in good shape,
so maybe it’s just a trick of the light. The ways he’s different are too minute
to mention: a face and body two and a half years older in ways only someone
intimately familiar with them would notice.
“—tall,” I finally finish, wincing a
little.
“Yeah,” Ren says. “Been trying my hardest
to knock off a few inches, but…” He shrugs, and I realize too late he’s trying
to make a joke, so my laugh comes out stilted.
“Well,” I say. “I’m in my old room, but
I’ll stay out of your way.”
Ren raises a fist to his forehead. For a
moment, the mask falls, his eyes honing in on me again. Ren’s always had a way
of seeing through me, and suddenly I’m sixteen again, crying against his
shoulder because I just failed a math test, or eighteen, anxiously poring over
a dog-eared welcome packet as we drive north to Portland as college freshmen,
or twenty-seven, standing on a cold sidewalk on New Year’s Eve, the last time I
saw him.
“Right,” Ren says, eyes still on mine,
then, “Actually, I should probably mention—” He stops short when he sees the
small flinch on my face, like I’m bracing for what he’s going to say next. His
fist drops to his side. “We’re on the screen porch again this year.”
I clamp my lips together. “Hmm?” I say.
“You and I,” Ren says, nodding between us
like that is the part of his sentence he needs to clarify. “They put us
on the screened-in porch again this year.”
“Who is they?” I ask, though there’s
only one possible answer. Our families. The other people you’ve been
avoiding.
“Well,” Ren says. “The last couple years—”
He pauses.
I paste as placid a look on my face as
possible, like it’s normal that I haven’t been here for the last two summers,
like it’s normal that he and I are no longer a we, bound together by
something that I used to think was profound, and now just feels like time,
proximity, all those things that can tie people together.
“Stevie and Leo have been in the room you
two used to share, and Thad’s in the one I usually take.”
“No worries,” I say, smile tight, already
angling my way out of the kitchen. What did I expect? That they’d walk by my
room in hushed reverence all this time, maintaining it like a shrine when
there’s hardly enough space for all of us as is? That Stevie and Leo wouldn’t
use it as their own? “Let me know if you need any help. Otherwise, I’ll meet
you on the screened-in porch tomorrow.”
His brows bend toward each other and his
eyes go dark. “Right. I won’t get in your way, then.”
I, a nearly thirty-year-old woman, salute
him on my way out.
From FRIENDS TO LOVERS by Sally Blakey.
Copyright 2025 by Sally Blakely. Published by Canary Street Press, an imprint
of HTP Books/HarperCollins.
I see we are on these tours together.
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