Love and Other Brain Experiments
A Novel
-
- $279.00
-
- $279.00
Descripción editorial
“Perfect for fans of Ali Hazelwood and other STEM romances.” —Booklist (starred review)
An academic-rivals-to-lovers rom-com set at a New York conference about two neuroscientists who are forced to pretend they’re dating, leading to unexpected chemistry and a heartfelt journey of self-discovery.
Neuroscientist Dr. Frances Silberstein has success on the brain. As a grad student, she was offered a job by her brilliant boyfriend, but determined to make it on her own, she turned it—and him—down. Now, stuck in postdoc purgatory with no job security and no personal life to speak of, Frances is desperate to make a breakthrough. Her best shot is a summer conference packed with her field’s leading scientists. The only problem? It’s organized by her ex, who has found the success that’s eluded her. But backing out is not an option, because Frances desperately needs to network to save her career.
Enter Dr. Lewis North: her perceptive, meticulous, and inconveniently attractive rival. When their academic sniping gets mistaken for flirtatious chemistry, Frances doesn’t deny it—putting her integrity and career on the line. As soon as her prefrontal cortex is operational again, Frances realizes she needs to keep up the charade, or risk everything she’s worked for. Faking data is out of the question, but fake dating? That might just be the solution she needs.
But as Lewis starts to make her reward centers spark and a major setback has Frances questioning everything, she must confront what she’s willing to chase—for love, for science, and for the future she thought she wanted.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Debut author Brohm draws from her background in neuroscience for this cute if somewhat slow contemporary. Neuroscientist Frances Silberstein travels to New York to attend a summer program organized by her ex, Jacob, hoping to make connections in case her grant funding falls through. When she arrives at the same time as her academic nemesis, Lewis North, who once failed to credit her on a research paper, Jacob's postdoctoral researcher-turned-fiancee, Vivienne, mistakenly assumes that the pair are in a relationship. Frances is too flustered to correct her right away, and then fears she will seem like a liar if the truth gets out, potentially damaging her professional reputation. So the pair agree to fake date for the duration of the conference. Inevitably, attraction ignites, the lines between reality and pretend blur, and the truth behind Lewis's failure to credit Frances's work is revealed. Throughout, Brohm offers abundant details about the frustrations and politics of academia, all of which feel authentic but which occasionally distract from the thrust of the novel. Still, the angst between Frances and Lewis is delicious and the focus on STEM will appeal to fans of Ali Hazelwood.