Zum Hauptinhalt springen
Nicht aus der Schweiz? Besuchen Sie lehmanns.de

Lessons in Falling: English Edition by LYX (eBook)

von WATTPAD-Superstar Selina Mae

(Autor)

eBook Download: EPUB
2025 | 1. Aufl. 2025
352 Seiten
Lyx.digital (Verlag)
978-3-7363-2468-8 (ISBN)

Lese- und Medienproben

Lessons in Falling: English Edition by LYX - Selina Mae
Systemvoraussetzungen
11,99 inkl. MwSt
(CHF 11,70)
Der eBook-Verkauf erfolgt durch die Lehmanns Media GmbH (Berlin) zum Preis in Euro inkl. MwSt.
  • Download sofort lieferbar
  • Zahlungsarten anzeigen

»I DON'T WANT YOU HERE, CADEN.«
»I' LL GET OVER IT!«

Valentina Rhodes has put herself last her entire life. So, before pursuing her masters at HBU, she vows this summer will be different. With her friends, Oakport Island, and a secret bucket list meant to help her be selfish for a change. Finding soccer captain Caden Callahan in her room was not part of that plan though, and that they're bunking together even less. The No-Fraternization Policy between her friends runs deep, and if she'd known he'd be forced into their circle, she wouldn't have slept with him four months earlier. Now, staying away from Caden is a given, but gets damn-near impossible between her new-found love of selfishness and the realization that he's the only person she can truly be herself around ...

»LESSONS IN FALLING combines everything a good romance book needs: humor, tension and themes to make you think - a perfect match!« CARINA FROM QUEEN.CARI

English edition of LESSONS IN FALLING by WATTPAD-superstar Selina Mae



<p>Als begeisterte Liebesromanautorin und (Überraschung!) -leserin kompensiert<strong>Selina Mae</strong>ihre nicht vorhandenen Meet-Cutes im echten Leben, indem sie sie einfach durch ihre Figuren erlebt. Unter dem Namen Seselina schrieb sie auf<strong>WATTPAD</strong>seit fast zehn Jahren Fan-Fictions und begeisterte mit ihren Geschichten weltweit Millionen von Leser:innen,bevor sie den Schritt in die Buchbranche wagte. Selina lebt und schreibt in Berlin.</p> <p><strong>Selina Mae</strong> is a writer of romance and reader of... (you guessed it!) romance and hasbeen compensating for her lack ofmeet cutes by writing them into her books. Sharing her work on <strong>WATTPAD</strong>(@Seselina) for almost ten years, shereached millions of readers around theworld before deciding to dip her feetinto the publishing world.</p>

CHAPTER 1


VALENTINA

Fuck. Fuck, fuck, fuck, fuck.

I didn’t speed often, really. Usually, I followed rules and drove the speed limit—and I was quite proud of the fact that I’d never been pulled over by the cops before. I was a good driver, and not much would make me jeopardize my reputation as one. But (accidentally) drifting around corners and squeaking to a stop almost with emergency-break swiftness didn’t scream safety to me, so maybe I had changed.

I was late, though. For the best day of the year, no less.

Bottomless Margaritas. Karaoke performances that became progressively worse the longer the night went on. Sandy feet, the sound of waves rolling against the beach in the near distance. My friends. A shabby bar on Oakport Island on the first weekend of July—where we’d stay for the rest of summer break.

Two months in which I didn’t have to worry about my sister (impossible), Mom (always did), or the burden of upholding my imperfectly perfect college life for the sake of my family’s validation. Two months in which, for the first time, I wanted to think about myself. Sometimes, at least.

So: late. Drifting. Screeching to a stop in front of the grey colonial style house I could almost call home. The blue shutters by the windows were open—probably hadn’t been closed since the house had been built ten years ago. I could see the window to my room and already had the sheets of the upper bunk in my head.

Bunk, because I’d always stayed in the kids’ room by myself, while my best friends were split into the other bedrooms that had a much more grown-up, no-bunkbed feel to them.

All three of them stood on the curb now, performatively tapping one foot against the pavement, and checking the time on the nonexistent watch around their wrists. Synchronized.

My windows were rolled all the way down, so I heard when one of them yelled, “You’re late!”, just in case I hadn’t realized. Iris grinned widely, gap between her two front teeth on full display when she emphasized, “I don’t think I’ve ever seen you late for anything.”

Alfie—his red hair wild from the coastal winds—nodded, then dramatically narrowed his eyes when our gazes met. “The invite says eight, and Valentina Rhodes will be on frat row at eight on the dot. It’s an unwritten law.”

“But here she is. Our favorite honors student,” Anni jumped in, her German accent, as always, heavier after the month she’d spent back home. “Late. For the best day of the year.”

Shutting the car door behind me, I tried to glare at them. Really, really hard.

And failed.

The corners of my mouth lifted, and everything that was happening—the deep, goofy smile on my lips, the way my cheeks hurt, the sparkle in my eyes and the way my arms opened widely—was beyond my control. Like my body had a natural reaction to seeing my best friends, and there was nothing I could do about it.

Our group hug (more of a tackle, really) was inevitable. Anni squealed first. She broke formation to jump those four steps toward me, her blonde hair whipping in every possible direction when she collapsed into me, and the rest followed.

It had only been a month—one month and eight days, to be exact—since we’d last seen each other. Since Anni had flown to Stuttgart, Iris had gone back to her family in California, before they took off for a dream vacation to Cancun (which I’d not only been forced to follow on social media, but had received at least a thousand texts about, including beach and sea and pool pictures). Alfie had been here: his family’s summer home on Oakport Island. And the rest of the Dunbridges—Mom, Dad, two younger brothers—had left yesterday.

“I missed the ferry,” I mumbled my explanation into… somebody’s hair. “They switched ours with the pedestrian one and let it go early. For reasons unknown.” Iris pulled back, and I finally knew it was Alfie’s wild, naturally red hair that had been tickling my nose, because Iris’ unnaturally red hair followed with her. A color she’d said she’d picked to match his… gingerness. Only that it had turned out far more orange-pink-looking on her first dye-job two years ago, and she’d stuck with the pastel color since.

When I first dyed my hair a week later, I’d kind of done it for the bit. Same as Iris, though, I’d stuck with the cherry red. Her brown eyes were scrutinizing me now, narrowing and assessing. “You’re usually an hour early to departure, anyway. What—?”

“Mom.”

There was no need to explain that my Mom had been out all night, and hadn’t come home until an hour after I’d wanted to get going—even less that I couldn’t leave my sister without knowing if she’d come home at all. Because my best friend closed her mouth and gave a single understanding nod, without my having to spell it out. “Ah.”

I expected a moment to breathe when the rest started to untangle from me. Some time to take in the hydrangeas around the house, always at their best right after Alfie’s family left. When we’d come here in the spring or autumn, sometimes over winter break, they did not look… well. But instead of marveling at their colors or hurling my luggage into the house or texting Mom that I’d arrived (not that she’d care, necessarily), Iris glanced at her phone, presumably saw the time, and locked eyes with me.

“Now we’re late!” she screeched, and I barely had time to lock my car—still half-heartedly parked on the curb—before she dragged me toward her mint green rental Bronco, in front of the garage. The first time she’d rented it, our first summer here after our first year of college together, she’d said, affectionately: One day I will buy you. Before kissing its hood goodbye.

For now, she’d opted for renting it every time we were here, and insisting she always drive to make sure she spends, “as much time with her as possible”. Her being the car.

It must’ve been less than a minute before all four of us sat in Iris’ beloved Bronco, and I didn’t even attempt to request getting my luggage inside or having a glass of water or generally just a moment to breathe, before we took off again. Alfie and I sat in the back, Anni in the passenger seat, and Iris glanced at me through the rearview mirror as she reversed out of the driveway. “I cannot believe you were late,” she snickered in amusement.

“The ferry was early.

With a cruel smile, her eyes flicked back to the road. “Because the ferry was early,” she repeated, pointedly, still smirking in that loving, know-it-all way of hers. “We’re close to missing Chester’s opening performance.”

“And we cannot start our summer without a seventy-something guy singing Dancing Queen to us!” Anni cried in agreement, and Iris sped up.

Our first weekend on the island always looked the same. Friday night was karaoke and margaritas, and Chester always opened the stage at eight-thirty with the same song. Saturday morning was always full of regrets: a big hangover breakfast assembled from whatever Alfie’s family had left behind, before we stumbled into town, sometimes still half-drunk (Alfie had thrown up on the twenty-minute track at least twice already), to get ice cream, window shop and eventually get another alcoholic drink once the Friday Night Margaritas had settled.

We’d walk back slightly buzzed, sun burning, the breeze never breezy enough to feel relieving. Anni would be slightly sunburnt by then. Alfie as red as a lobster. And despite the inevitable nausea, I’d be the happiest I’d been in a long time. Sundays—Mom used to say, like God intended—we’d rest. Read books, swim in the pool or ocean or take long, cold showers to cool down, depending on how warm the respective bodies of water would be.

It was eight thirty-one when we rolled into the parking lot of Blitz now. “If we miss even a note of Dancing Queen, I’m blaming Valentina!” Iris yelled, already half-way to the bar’s entrance.

Alfie was, apparently, less worried about missing something. No urgency in either of our strides, we strolled up to the wooden door, its blue paint chipped by the salty sea. “You know,” he snickered. “You could’ve taken that pedestrian ferry, if you’d stop insisting on driving all the way down here with a vehicle that’s not guaranteed to make the two-hundred mile trip. Rent a car here that doesn’t break down twice a month.”

I would’ve also made it if I’d just stop insisting on cleaning messes that, technically, weren’t mine to begin with. Though minding your own business became a lot harder when it was your mother’s mess, and you’d been growing up doing nothing but trying to please her.

I snorted, something between a laugh and a cackle as I shook my head. “Instead of eating when I get back to Hall Beck for grad school, right?”

“I’d take care of it.”

“The eating part? Or the car renting part?”

“Either.” Alfie shrugged. “Both.”

But he always did. It was half the issue. Feeling like I was inconveniencing my friends when they got me gifts or paid for stuff or went out of their way to do something nice for...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 25.7.2025
Reihe/Serie Hall Beck University
Hall Beck University: English Edition by LYX
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Literatur Romane / Erzählungen
Schlagworte Aktion Kulturpass • Amnesia • Bookstagram • Booktok • BookTok Germany • College • dracotok • dramatisch • Elle Kennedy • Emotional • Ex-Freund • Fanfiction • forced proximity • found family • Große Gefühle • Hannah Grace • Henry Parker Pressley • Icebreaker • Journalistin • kulturpass • Leidenschaft • Liebe • Liebesgeschichte • Liebesroman • Major League Soccer • Nähe • New Adult • one bed • One Night Stand • Paula Castillo • Romance • Romantik • romantisch • second chance romance • Sports-Romance • Studium • TikTok • TikTok books • TikTok Germany • tiktok made me buy it • Wattpad • Wildfire
ISBN-10 3-7363-2468-5 / 3736324685
ISBN-13 978-3-7363-2468-8 / 9783736324688
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
Haben Sie eine Frage zum Produkt?
EPUBEPUB (Wasserzeichen)

DRM: Digitales Wasserzeichen
Dieses eBook enthält ein digitales Wasser­zeichen und ist damit für Sie persona­lisiert. Bei einer missbräuch­lichen Weiter­gabe des eBooks an Dritte ist eine Rück­ver­folgung an die Quelle möglich.

Dateiformat: EPUB (Electronic Publication)
EPUB ist ein offener Standard für eBooks und eignet sich besonders zur Darstellung von Belle­tristik und Sach­büchern. Der Fließ­text wird dynamisch an die Display- und Schrift­größe ange­passt. Auch für mobile Lese­geräte ist EPUB daher gut geeignet.

Systemvoraussetzungen:
PC/Mac: Mit einem PC oder Mac können Sie dieses eBook lesen. Sie benötigen dafür die kostenlose Software Adobe Digital Editions.
eReader: Dieses eBook kann mit (fast) allen eBook-Readern gelesen werden. Mit dem amazon-Kindle ist es aber nicht kompatibel.
Smartphone/Tablet: Egal ob Apple oder Android, dieses eBook können Sie lesen. Sie benötigen dafür eine kostenlose App.
Geräteliste und zusätzliche Hinweise

Buying eBooks from abroad
For tax law reasons we can sell eBooks just within Germany and Switzerland. Regrettably we cannot fulfill eBook-orders from other countries.

Mehr entdecken
aus dem Bereich
Roman

von Wolf Haas

eBook Download (2025)
Carl Hanser (Verlag)
CHF 18,55