How You Get the Girl
Awe-inspiring
Delightful
Light hearted

How You Get the Girl

Anita Kelly2024
Chemistry sizzles in this workplace rom-com set in the world of high school basketball from the author of Love & Other Disasters, named a "must-read" by USA Today, PopSugar, SheReads, and Harper Bazaar. When smart-mouthed Vanessa Lerner joins the high school basketball team Julie Parker coaches, Julie's ready for the challenge. What she's not ready for is Vanessa's new foster parent, Elle Cochrane--former University of Tennessee basketball star. While star-struck at first, soon Julie persuades Elle to step into the unfilled position of assistant coach for the year. Even though Elle has stayed out of the basketball world since an injury ended her short-lived WNBA career, the gig might be a way to become closer to Vanessa--and to spend more time with Julie, who makes Elle laugh. As the coaches grow closer, Elle has a hard time understanding how Julie is single. When Julie reveals her lifelong insecurity about dating and how she wishes it was more like sports--being able to practice first--it sparks an intriguing idea. While Elle still doubts her abilities as a basketball coach, helping Julie figure out dating is definitely something she can do. But as the basketball season progresses, and lines grow increasingly blurred, Julie and Elle must decide to join the game--or retreat to the sidelines.
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Reviews

Photo of mirta <3
mirta <3@marga
3 stars
Apr 9, 2025

This was good but not really my thing. Book plots that only follow cliches are what annoy me the most because it’s easy to understand that they are written around that plot just to get people to read it.

Anyway, i loved the ace rep, because it made me feel seen (although i learned that sapphic smut is not really my thing :/ ), and the trans one too! I wonder how they managed to translate this book in italian, but i guess we’ll never know.

I also appreciated how the author dealt with the topic of mental health.

However, I think Julie’s relationship with her sibling should have been explored more. I also think that if the book is a sports book (in this case, basketball), it should be more centered on it, giving insights on the games and creating a better “sport atmosphere”.

+2
Photo of kelly bee
kelly bee@kellybee
5 stars
Feb 13, 2024

I really really loved this one. I think the characters were super relatable. both MC's had a lot of struggles I think a lot of people in their late 20's and early 30's can go through about feeling behind the rest of the people around you or not knowing your place in the world. I also appreciated that Julie was still questioning her sexuality and whether she could potentially be ace or demi or what that could look like for her relationship moving forward and how open she was with Elle about it from the jump. I loved how it was this instant spark between them and even though it was kind of a celebrity crush turned real for Julie, Elle didn't judge her about that, lol. They had awesome chemistry and I really loved it.

Also to note, as a person that falls somewhere on the queer spectrum (I am also still trying to figure out myself) that lives in Nashville as well, I really appreciated Anita talking about our local politics and how it can affect us but still making sure to stand up for her nonbinary and queer characters here. Tennessee sucks but without people making waves excatly like those characters, it would be even worse. Also also, all of the local Nashville lore was just very fun to read.

Thank you so much to Forever and netgalley for the opportunity to read this one early!

Photo of Jazelle H
Jazelle H@battyaboutbooks
4 stars
Feb 5, 2024

🦇 How You Get the Girl Book Review 🦇


Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐


❓ #QOTD If you could get a tattoo today, what would you get (and what's the meaning behind it)? ❓


🦇 While coaching East Nashville High's girl's basketball teen, Coach Julie Parker expects passionate players and quick springs; not for the star of her fantasies, ex-WNBA baller Elle F*CKING Cochrane, to show up with the niece she's fostering. Despite being all heart-eyed and tongue-tied, Julie convinces Elle to become her assistant coach, allowing Elle to keep an eye on her niece. Neither expects sparks to fly along with basketballs shooting across the court, even as Elle helps Julie navigate the unfamiliar terrain of dating. Will they continue sitting on the sidelines of their own lives, or finally take a shot?


💜 Dear Anita Kelly. Thank you. Thank you for a story about two beautifully, vulnerably queer women who are so real and authentic and layered. What easily could have been a trope-filled sapphic sports romance is instead a stunning exploration of identity, mental health, and personal growth. Bear with me, bookish bats, as I try to find my words. This story started with Julie's megawatt heart-eyed celebrity crush and a little forced proximity, but it became so much more. Between her queer twin and best friend, Julie always thought she was a little behind in defining her queerness, but there's no timeline, no deadline. She always struggled to find her label, her place (only to realize they're just...whatever!), and it's not until Elle steps into her life and throws her out of her comfort zone that Julie gets the chance to grow into herself. I also adored that Jules couldn't fully pick one label ("15 percent general queer, 10 percent lesbian stereotype. 20 percent ace, 55 percent dumbass.") because identity is in fact a spectrum. She does mention the possibility of being demisexual at one point, which my gf identifies as, and honestly...I don't think I've ever seen a character recognize that as an option before. To say it brought tears to my eyes is an understatement.


💜 In a way, Elle has been stuck in a comfort zone, too, until she starts fostering her niece and coaching alongside Jules. Elle is so patient with Jules, so willing to step back and give Jules the chance to process her own thoughts, recognize her own needs. There's a give and take to their relationship--when one falters, the other steps in to help them find their balance again. There are so many layers to this story--"There's this idea embedded into our culture of getting over things," "Maybe all love is a surprise, followed by practice," "You can be happy and still feel like you don't really know what you're doing."--so much to appreciate in the little lessons these women learned. Together. (If we're keeping track, I cried three times while reading this book: when seeing "demi," at the news clipping, and during Jule's speech. I need more tissues now, thank you.)


💙 There is one topic I wish received a little more attention, namely because it isn't discussed often enough. Elle meets with the school's weights guy, who assumes all the players on the team are girls: "the ingrained hierarchy and immovable binary of most sports." Elle and Julie made a "space for any player who wanted to put in the work, regardless of their identity." Kelly mentions fighting for equality in sports within her acknowledgments, but I do wish we'd seen a little of that fight as a source of conflict within the book.


💙 The story is a bit slow at the beginning, but once it finds its momentum, it GOES. I will say I wasn't aware this was a duology when I grabbed this ARC, but the references to the previous story weren't so heavy that you can't enjoy this one as a stand-alone.


🦇 Recommended to all readers, whether you're looking for a sports romance, sapphic romance, or simply a good book with lots of mental health love. This one is going to stay with me for a long while.


✨ The Vibes ✨

🌈 Sapphic Ship - Lesbian/Demi

💞 Fake/Practice Dating

🏀 Sports / Workplace / Forced Prox Romance

🏆 Mental Health Rep

📚 Part of the Nashville Series

🏆 Contemporary Romance

🏀 Dual POV

💞 Smut

🌈 Queer Main & Side Cast


🦇 Major thanks to the author @anitakellywrites and publisher @readforeverpub for providing an ARC of this book via Netgalley. 🥰 This does not affect my opinion regarding the book.


💬 Quotes


❝ Any relationship that’s worthwhile, whether it’s friendship or romantic or sexual, only really works when you try. ❞


❝ But that when it came to identity, when it came to queerness, the whole point was that there were no tryouts. If you were even thinking about it, you were already on the team. That labels weren’t meant to confine, only to bring comfort to those for whom they were useful. That Julie didn’t need to ascribe to any of them, if she didn’t want to. ❞


❝ “There’s nothing wrong with you, Julie,” Elle said in that same half-whisper that was slowly going to kill her. “You’re not behind on anything. There’s nothing for you to be behind on. There’s nothing, and no one, you have to track your own life by.” ❞


❝ Maybe all love was a surprise, followed by practice. A step out of comfort zones, followed by hard work. Lurking in all the places you didn’t expect, places that become a forever part of you. ❞

+8
Photo of val
val@lilacsuns
3.5 stars
Jul 6, 2024
Photo of Alex Hill
Alex Hill @mybookishworld
4 stars
Jun 27, 2024
Photo of Samantha
Samantha @safin
4.5 stars
Apr 23, 2024

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