What Are Friends For?
By Sarah Sutton
Genre: YA Romance
FALLING IN LOVE ISN'T COMPLICATED...UNLESS IT'S WITH YOUR BEST FRIEND.
A close, easygoing friendship can all change with just one kiss. Seventeen-year-old Remi Beaufort
learns this the hard way when she plays a blindfolded kissing game at a party.
She thinks she’s kissing Jeremy, the totally hot basketball player she’s been crushing on. And the kiss...
it’s amazing. Heart-stopping, world-changing, toe-curling. The kiss makes her forget about her
overbearing mother, the next-door neighbor’s drama, and the probability that she’ll fail her senior year.
The best kiss of her life makes all that fall away.
Until her blindfold falls off, and she realizes that instead of kissing her crush, she’s kissing Elijah, her
best friend since third grade.
Though she manages to convince Elijah that he was kissing his girlfriend, Remi can’t get the thought of
his lips on hers out of her head. As things between them grow more and more complicated—because it
turns out her fantasizing about his mouth is more of a problem than it sounds—Remi has to make a
choice: does she live the rest of her life loving her best friend in secret? Or does she tell the truth and
risk ruining their friendship forever?
Heart-melting and romantic, What Are Friends For? is a swoon-worthy best-friends-to-lovers story that
will leave you crushing hard.
Sarah Sutton is a YA Romance author, bringing you stories about teenagers falling in love (sometimes
with magic)✨She spends her days dreaming up ideas with her two adorable puppies by her side being
cheerleaders (and mega distractions).
GUEST POST
My Writing Process
My
writing process used to be to just throw something at the wall and
hope it sticks (or however that very bizarre expression goes). I
didn’t know much else than just
write. That was
something that really bit me in the butt in the long term, though,
just writing and hoping it’d work. That’s not to say you have
to be a
plotter—someone who writes out everything—but back then, I didn’t
even know the basic of story structure. I’d write scenes as they
popped into my head without worrying about connecting the dots later,
tying all the loose ends up. As I went on in my journey, learning
more and more about story structure and familiarizing myself with the
way it works, things seemed to fall in place. Save
the Cat Writes a Novel was
a huge help for me in this. And now, just before I sit down to begin
writing any story of mine, I give that book a read-through.
Because of my struggles with
throwing things at the wall in the past, I became an outliner. I’d
outline as much as the story as I could—usually the story beats and
chapter outlines—before beginning to write—sometimes I wouldn’t
finish my outline before I’d be just itching to start. But having a
clear idea of what you want to write—outlining or not—is
important. A beginning and an end are important. As long as you know
where you’re going, the fun is in the journey!
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