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Cole and Laila Are Just Friends

A Hilarious Friends-to-Lovers Rom-Com

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Cole and Laila Are Just Friends

De: Bethany Turner
Narrado por: Talon David, Andrew Eiden
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"Cole and Laila Are Just Friends is a glorious ode to '90s romcoms, lifelong friendships, and all the many twists of life that drop us right where we need to be. Full of warmth and witticisms galore, this will-they-or-won't-they love story will capture readers from the first page and spin them capably through the landmarks of New York alongside the most rootable duo I've ever encountered." --Nora Nguyen, author of Adam & Evie's Matchmaking Tour

Cole and Laila have been inseparable since they could crawl. And they've never thought about each other that way. Except for when they have. Rarely. Once in a while, sure. But seriously . . . hardly ever.

Cole Kimball and Laila Olivet have been best friends their entire lives. Cole is the only person (apart from blood relatives) who's seen Laila in her oversized, pink, plastic, Sophia Loren glasses. Laila is always the first person to taste test any new dish Cole creates in his family's restaurant . . . even though she has the refined palate of a kindergartener. Most importantly, Cole and Laila are always talking. About everything.

When Cole discovers a betrayal from his recently deceased grandfather that shatters his world, staying in Adelaide Springs, Colorado, is suddenly unfathomable. But Laila loves her life in their small mountain town and can't imagine ever living anywhere else. She loves serving customers who tip her with a dozen fresh eggs. She loves living within walking distance of all her favorite people. And she's very much not okay with the idea of not being able to walk to her very favorite person.

Still, when Cole toys with moving across the country to New York City, she decides to support her best friend--even as she secretly hopes she can convince him to stay home. And not just for his killer chocolate chip pancakes. Because she loves him. As a friend. Just as a friend. Right?

They make a deal: Laila won't beg him to stay, and Cole won't try to convince her to come with him. They have one week in New York before their lives change forever, and all they have to do is enjoy their time together and pretend none of this is happening. But it's tough to ignore the very inconvenient feelings blooming out of nowhere. In both of them. And these potentially friendship-destroying feelings, once out in the open, have absolutely no take-backs.

If When Harry Met Sally had a quippy literary love child with Gilmore Girls' Luke and Lorelai, you'd get Cole and Laila. Just . . . don't tell them that.

Author's Note: Cole and Laila are best friends who slow-burn (like, for nearly forty years, so . . . SLOW) toward love and yet never see it coming in this low-spice/clean, laugh-out-loud friends-to-lovers rom-com. All it takes is the threat of being separated, a trip to NYC, one night in one bed, a fake blind date for the ages, and a little dancing on a penthouse rooftop for the slow-burn to finally, finally ignite.

Cole and Laila Are Just Friends is a standalone novel set in the charming Adelaide Springs, Colorado, where the author's previous book, Brynn and Sebastian Hate Each Other, also takes place.

Comedia Romántica Contemporario Limpio y Sano

Reseñas de la Crítica

'Bethany Turner has taken my favorite trope, friends-to-more, and created the most heartwarming, joy-filled, tender story in COLE AND LAILA ARE JUST FRIENDS. It's absolutely wonderful! Their love for each other brews from the first page all the way through to the beautiful finale. Why it takes them so long to realize how made for each other they are, well . . . sometimes falling in love with your best friends is complicated. With all sorts of pop culture references and a first 'fake' date to BEAT all first 'fake' dates, this book is Turner at the very top of her game. Do yourself a favor and pick up this gem of a story.'
'COLE AND LAILA ARE JUST FRIENDS is a glorious ode to '90s romcoms, lifelong friendships, and all the many twists of life that drop us right where we need to be. Full of warmth and witticisms galore, this will-they-or-won't-they love story will capture readers from the first page and spin them capably through the landmarks of New York alongside the most rootable duo I've ever encountered. Sweet and swoony, yet always rooted in human struggles (and stubbornness!), COLE AND LAILA ARE JUST FRIENDS is the tight, affirming hug we all need right now.'
'Deliciously romantic and laugh out loud funny, this one had me in its grip until the very end. Cole and Laila are meant-to-be perfection. I loved it!'
'Hands down THE BEST pairing of first-love flutters and soul-deep friendship a romance reader could ask for--a new fan favorite! Funny, moving, and achingly adorable, Cole + Laila = relationship goals.'
'I always thought, Once you're in love, the only place you ever fall in love again is the movies. But you can fall in love again reading this book.'
'Small town romance? Check. Friends-to-lovers? Double check. Enough romantic tension to keep you turning pages well into the night? That's a big check! I couldn't put down Cole and Laila's love story.'
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This is a Funny, touching, lovely story. I so loved loved loved all the culture references.

wonderful

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Loved this innocent love story! Such a nice change of pace to have a well written story, great narration, and lovable characters without all the closed door romance

So sweet and so good

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I wanted more!! I need like two more chapters at the end. ugggh. lol. Great read! I would recommend!

Ended too soon

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I loved this story—and the performance. (Can Andrew Eiden read everything from now on?) Cole and Laila are tons of fun. The premise of friends to more… who had never even considered being “more” before… was a unique twist on the trope.

I kept inventing chores so I could keep listening.

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I absolutely loved this story and the clever banter laced throughout the book. I laughed and I swooned. I thoroughly enjoyed this audiobook!

Charming story!

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I enjoyed this book. I listed to the audiobook, and the narrators did a fantastic job bringing these characters and their story to life, and it made them feel real. I really liked Cole and Laila's relationship, and their friendship felt as if they really had been friends for a decade.
Once we get into Cole and Laila's romance, I really enjoyed it. They're sweet. You can tell how much they care for each other. Cole bakes and cooks for Laila, and Laila heaps praise on Cole. It's kind of perfect.

We spend a lot of time in flashbacks, where we see the friendship of Laila and Cole created and cemented. It's really nice to be able to get so much backstory for both of our main characters. I do wish that the characterizations were a little deeper, though. Cole is the ever competent man, and Laila is the adorkable girl who's main trait is that she's clumsy. But, they're both very likable characters, and I give many kudos to writing Cole as kind and caring, instead of as a smarmy, smug grump so many other books in this genre are fond of. Cole, being kind, and especially given that he loves to cook, is a breath of fresh air in the genre.

My one real critique of the book would be that "slowburn" is a very apt, perhaps too apt, description of this book. They don't even begin to question their feelings or their physical attraction to each other until we're halfway through the book. The first half is interesting, don't get me wrong. It deals with Cole feeling betrayed and he and Laila going to NYC. However, before the halfway point, there is very little, if any, build up to any romance or even any attraction. It is really only once we cross the halfway point that one of the characters, and basically only as a pure thought experiment, brings up whether not they'd work romantically.

I don't need a book to have sex scenes (this book has none, and is in fact incredibly PG-rated throughout), but the two main characters should feel a little physical attraction to each other. It's the basis of most relationships (in the beginning, at least, and not including asexual people, obvs, etc). The two characters had a lot of emotional connection, whether friendly or romantic, but honestly they had very little physical connection. And perhaps that was a drawback to writing the story so "clean". As I said, it doesn't have any sexual tension, or even mention of it. And not having a sex scene is perfectly fine! However, the author over-corrected. There's near zero mention of any kind of physical attraction at all. Near the end, there are mentions that Cole looks at Laila's legs, but again, it's near the very end of the book and bit late.

*I just went back and read the description again, and saw that this is filed under "Clean and Wholesome Romance". And it definitely is! I didn't realize that, but again, spice is not a must for me. But even being clean and wholesome, you've gotta at least have some sort of physical attraction going! "She smiled, and his stomach turned upside down. Since when did that happen?" -- I wrote that, and even small things like that would've gone a long way, but still stayed clean.

This book had some really great stuff just under the surface. I do wish we spent a lot less time on pop-culture references, and more time on the actual characters. One particularly egregious scene has Laila and Cole walking around NYC, and there will be a paragraph explaining how they arrived at a new spot (either walking or by subway), and then a page and a half of Laila recounting the scene from a movie that used that spot. And then another paragraph of them walking to another street corner, and then another full page giving the synopsis of another movie. It happens 4 or 5 times in a row. I get that Laila really likes Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan, but I'm not trying to read the wiki for Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan; I'm trying to read about Laila and Cole.

A lot of the book is almost circular. They think about the relationship, and then they think about those thoughts. And they talk about the relationship, and then they talk about the talk they just had, and they talk about wanting to talk about that talk. Also, Laila's chapters are in first person, and Cole's are in third person. It's not immersion breaking, but it's odd and noticeable.

I say this, but I did read the book in 2 days. The anticipation of the very, very slow slowburn had me on edge. I had to find out if and when they were going to kiss! I had to find out their happy ending. I had to find out what really happened with those contracts that left Cole with nothing. There's a lot here that could have made this book really amazing. I just don't think it was executed to the fullest.

A Slowburn Romance for the PG-rated Crowd

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I enjoyed the story line and how they figured out they were made for each other.

The writing, a love story without out the bad words and inappropriate descriptions. Keep up the great work.

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I loved this story. the best friends to lovers is one of my favorite tropes. I love how they communicate. I am confused though as to why in Leila's chapters it's in first person but in Cole's chapters it's in 3rd person. that was weird. this is a dual narration.

0/🌶
5/✨️

so cute

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Woah, this book was really good! I love the characters development and the relationship between each other, The fake dates, I LOVED THEM!

Just friends

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I love how upbeat & cheery & sweet this story is! I love a woo girl and that’s definitely Laila! But the overall storyline, to me, is just a bit unrealistic. Almost 40, the best friends anyone can be for 20+ years, have always lived in the same small town… and they have never had a DTR? Their friends haven’t ever joked ab them marrying each other someday? Even if the characters were 10 years younger it would have been at least a skosh more realistic!

Really sweet

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