Plot Summary
1. Confessions of a Skeptical Heart
Mara's career has finally taken off—her romance novel is about to be made into a movie. But as a woman who was emotionally neglected by her parents and taught to fend for herself, Mara's heart is armored with skepticism. Despite writing steamy, hopeful endings for others, she's never dared to believe she could have her own. When a disastrous press tour looms, Mara throws herself into her work, determined her career—her one true love—remains undistracted. Yet, even as the camera lights beckon, Mara confides in friends what no one knows: her heroines get the epic love story, but she's never let herself want one.
2. Crashing the TV Interview
Mara's excited for her live TV interview—until the host exposes her private disbelief in love, spinning her as a fraud and fueling a viral backlash. The result? Her studio pulls out of the greenlit movie sequel. Suddenly, Mara's reputation as a romance writer is in ruins. Friends and advisors scramble to repair the damage: if Mara can prove she's in a real relationship, perhaps she can redeem her image and save her budding film career. For defense, Mara's only option is a lie that forces her onto unfamiliar terrain—she'll need to play the role of a woman in love.
3. Reputation in Ruins
Mara's friends and her tough but clever publicist scramble to contain the flood of nasty press, with memes and TV pundits dissecting Mara's lack of love-life. In a wrenching moment of vulnerability, Mara admits this heartbreak is worse than any romantic tragedy—she doesn't just risk losing a lover, but her self-made identity as a successful, independent voice for women who want it all on their own terms.
4. A Proposal of Pretend
To salvage her image, Mara's friends propose the unthinkable: a sham relationship. Candidates are few, but mutual friend Jonas—a steady, shy accountant—emerges as the safest bet. Polite, risk-averse, and seemingly asexual, Jonas is everything Mara mocks in her fiction but nothing dangerous to her heart. Jonas, pressured by his own sense of loyalty and family obligations (especially to his ailing mother), agrees to the charade. They strike a pact: Mara helps with Jonas's mother's at-home dialysis; Jonas helps rehabilitate Mara's public persona.
5. Bargaining and Boundaries
The odd couple hammers out their terms at a desolate diner. Mara is flippant and sensual, Jonas cautious and earnest. Despite themselves, an unexpected spark of chemistry flickers—especially after an accidental kiss practiced for media appearances sends ripples through them both. Mara's first family dinner with Jonas's clan is a gauntlet, blending warmth with old wounds, while privately, each wonders what they've gotten themselves into. Pretending is easier said than done.
6. Family Dinner Trials
Jonas's family is close, quirky, and scarred but deeply loyal. Mara experiences family warmth she's never known but fears it's a deception—for their sake and her own. Jonas, meanwhile, sees a new side of Mara as she bonds with his mother. Mara is unexpectedly moved by the grounding stability—and the realization that here, maybe, is a glimpse of a different life. But vulnerability terrifies her as much as their ruse does.
7. Kissing Practice and Fireworks
Tension peaks as they rehearse for an impending press event. The staged affection, meant only for show, quickly becomes charged, emotional, and confusing for both. Even their friends notice a shift. As the press conference looms, Mara realizes her growing feelings threaten her carefully maintained independence. Jonas, seeing through Mara's bluster, worries their boundaries—and his heart—are slipping.
8. Navigating New Friendships
The fake relationship pushes Mara into deeper connections with Jonas's family and their circle. Despite acceptance, insecurity gnaws—as Mara's shame about her tumultuous past and sense of being an outsider persist. She doubts her right to happiness, sabotaging intimacy just as they start to "act" like a real couple.
9. Mom's Test and Mara's Truth
As Mara cares for Jonas's mother during dialysis, the two women form a bond. Mariah offers wisdom that challenges Mara's fatalism about love, validating her career and encouraging her to see herself as someone deserving of devotion, not just fleeting pleasure. Mara's inner walls tremble; she is offered the knowledge that being loved—and loving—are risks worth facing.
10. Press, Scandal, and a Father's Return
The staged relationship passes its first test at a high-stakes press conference—until Mara's estranged, abusive father crashes in, threatening her hard-won composure in public. Jonas defends her fiercely, winning Mara both public sympathy and a path to restore her career, but reopening deep wounds.
11. The Fake Becomes Real
Safely behind closed doors, Mara and Jonas cross lines neither thought they would. A spontaneous, passionate night together forges real intimacy. But their extremes—from Mara's erotic bravado to Jonas's sweetness—expose both old pain and new hope. Each is forced to reconsider what they want, and what they're capable of risking.
12. Tequila Confessions
With public scrutiny eased, Mara and Jonas celebrate at a club with friends. Fueled by alcohol and dancing, the line between act and reality blurs. A sexual near-encounter—broken off by Jonas—leaves Mara shaken; real feelings, and their consequences, are becoming inescapable. Both are terrified; both are hooked.
13. Lines Blurred, Guards Up
The morning after, regrets and uncertainties gnaw at Mara. For Jonas, jealousy and longing are proof he wants more, but he worries Mara's casual bravado is a defense against something deeper. Mara fears she can't ever give Jonas enough, haunted by the compulsion to run before she can be left.
14. Love Lessons from Family
Jonas's steadfast family, and Mara's friends, counsel them, sharing hard-won wisdom about risk and reward in love. Both must decide if vulnerability is worth the pain—and accept the risk of heartbreak is the price of authentic connection.
15. A Devastating Setback
After meeting Jonas's ex-girlfriend Tracey—who represents an ideal Mara thinks Jonas deserves—Mara spirals. Comparing herself to Tracey, she's convinced she can't win at "happily ever after." Alarmed by her own feelings, she abruptly ends things, running from Jonas, scared of the depth of what they have.
16. The Choice to Run
Convinced she'll only bring pain, Mara flees and self-destructs through old patterns, but finds none of it satisfies. Jonas, heartbroken, tries to move on but is paralyzed by the absence of what they had. Both try to fill the void—he with old flames, she with ambition—but end up more alone.
17. Atlanta Awaits
Mara lands a dream job as a TV writer in Atlanta. The new city, lux apartment, and creative challenge should thrill her—but everything feels empty without Jonas and his family. Separate, both pursue old dreams—career for Mara, "perfect partner" for Jonas—but find them hollow.
18. Realizations in Absence
Mara and Jonas each grapple with the truth—they are each other's family, each other's home. Jonas ends things with Tracey, realizing settling is worse than risking heartache; Mara, at Tess's wedding, aches for what she's lost. Both finally understand love is choosing, not accident—and that there is no perfect safety.
19. The Chase and the Leap
Jonas finds Mara, pleading for a second chance. He's learned love means supporting her dreams, not confining her. Mara, having finally realized her own pattern of running, decides not to let fear have the last word. They vow, imperfectly, to build their lives together—wherever it takes them.
20. Written Together—For Good
Jonas gives up his job to support Mara's ambitions, partnering in life and work. The couple, surrounded by family and friends, learns that happily ever after isn't the absence of trouble but choosing each other—again and again. With forgiveness, courage, and a risk shared, Mara finally believes: love is worth writing—and living—for.
Analysis
"Hello Fake Boyfriend" by Kelsie Hoss deftly retools the "fake dating" trope into a nuanced, character-driven meditation on self-protection, growth, and the audacity of hope. The novel's magic lies in refusing tidy, escapist answers—the central couple are repeatedly forced to reckon with the costs of risk: Mara's lifelong fear of abandonment and Jonas's comfort with settling for "fine" rather than pursuing fierce devotion. Their journey shows that love—like fiction—takes work, revision, and endless courage. Hoss crafts a cast of layered, diverse characters who subvert romance clichés: Mara is brazen, erotic, and plus-size, but authentically wounded; Jonas is gentle and submissive, yet capable of grand, life-changing leaps. The core lesson is that family can be chosen, happiness is daily work, and "happily ever after" means trusting someone enough to surrender both fear and control. In the end, the most radical act is Mara's: after a lifetime of running away, she chooses to stay—rewriting not just love stories, but her own. The book is both a celebration and interrogation of modern romance, challenging readers to risk heartbreak for the possibility of lasting intimacy, and to believe, even without guarantees, in themselves.
Review Summary
Reviews for Hello Fake Boyfriend are deeply divided. While many praise Jonas as a dream romantic hero — kind, selfless, and devoted — the majority of criticism centers on Mara, the female lead, who is widely described as selfish, toxic, and frustrating. Readers frequently express that Jonas deserved far better treatment. Common complaints include Mara's poor decision-making, lack of accountability, and disregard for her partner's feelings. A notable portion of readers DNF'd the book. Positive reviews highlight the fake-dating trope, witty dialogue, and plus-size representation.
Characters
Mara Taylor
Mara is a plus-size, fiercely independent romance writer who has never truly believed in love for herself—her childhood shaped by abandonment and betrayal left her with deep trust issues. She copes through casual sex and emotional bravado, using humor and frankness as armor. Her emotional journey is one of unlearning self-sabotage, risking vulnerability, and daring to hope she can be worthy not just of lust, but of lasting, tender love. Her growth is the heart of the story—she fights for her career, her dignity, and, finally, her own happiness.
Jonas Moore
Jonas is an accountant defined by loyalty, responsibility, and self-restraint. He was raised in a loving (if sometimes overwhelming) family, and his identity is built on reliability—his central fear is letting down those he loves, especially his chronically ill mother. Initially chosen for his "safe," unthreatening persona, Jonas proves to be a quietly passionate, principled man who wants real connection. His psychoanalysis reveals the shadow side of "dependability"—fear of rocking the boat, denial of his own needs. As Mara challenges him, he learns to assert his desires, take bold emotional risks, and redefine his dreams.
Mariah Moore
Jonas's mother, Mariah, is gentle but has endured physical and emotional scars—including trauma from a house fire. Her arc is subtle but powerful—Mariah represents the hope for healing, forgiveness, and the possibility of family even after tragedy. Her acceptance of Mara is deeply significant, helping Mara see her own value. Psychoanalytically, Mariah models enduring love built not on perfection, but mutual care and survival.
Cade Moore
Jonas's father is a model of steadfastness and fatherly guidance. He balances gentle humor with wisdom, quietly supporting Jonas's and Mara's journeys. His role is vital in helping both see that love is more about continuous showing up than grand gestures, countering Mara's belief in "flash" over "foundation."
Birdie
Mara's best friend, Birdie, is her safe harbor and emotional truth-teller. Birdie's own happy ending (with husband Cohen) is proof to Mara—and herself—that love can exist. Birdie supports Mara through every crisis, refuses to let her self-destruct, and reminds her there are many kinds of happily ever afters.
Henrietta
The third in Mara's friend triad, Henrietta is sensible, steady, and offers care Mara barely knows how to accept. She's the quiet counterpoint to Mara and Birdie, representing that the quieter forms of support and affection often go overlooked, but are essential.
Tracey
Tracey, Jonas's sister's best friend, is everything Mara believes she cannot be—slender, proper, connected to Jonas's family. Tracey's presence forces Mara to confront her own insecurities about self-worth, driving her to the brink of destruction. Yet, Tracey is ultimately no villain—she is kind, and her own emotional needs remind us that "perfection" is an illusion.
Jonas's Sister, Tess
Tess's good fortune and open-heartedness provide a positive counterpoint for Mara; her wedding (and baby) are extended metaphors for risk, renewal, and the cost of choosing joy even after pain.
Mara's Father
Absent, alcoholic, and abusive, Mara's father haunts her psyche. His late-stage attempt at sobriety and reconciliation triggers both hope and anxiety in Mara, paralleling her own journey toward healing old scars, accepting disappointment, and daring to believe in change.
Charlotte
Charlotte directs the action from offstage, steering Mara's path in the public eye. She represents the survival instincts Mara learned young, teaching that sometimes, faking it til you make it isn't just PR, but personal salvation. Her ability to push Mara toward growth is critical, even if her advice is sometimes transactional.
Plot Devices
The Fake Relationship Trope as Emotional Incubator
The entire narrative turns on the romance genre's classic "fake dating" trope, but subverts it by turning performance into therapy. Pretending, for both Mara and Jonas, strips away their defenses, forcing authenticity as their masks give them permission to be vulnerable. The device is deployed earnestly—what starts as self-protection, or social survival, transforms into genuine connection. The tension of "acting" as lovers breeds real feelings, while the inevitable tension between fantasy and reality fuels drama and growth.
Parallel and Intertwining Arcs
Supporting characters (Mariah, Birdie, Tracey) are carefully paired with the leads, juxtaposing belief in love with trauma, risk with safety, and ordinary happiness with extraordinary achievement. Their choices (weddings, babies, reconciliations) raise what's at stake for Mara and Jonas, pressing their emotional evolution.
Inciting Crisis and Public Stakes
Mara's initial unraveling is catalyzed by public exposure and performance anxiety—not just about love, but about being "enough." The plot is driven by the tension between private truth and public image; personal breakthroughs are linked to external, high-pressure events—press conferences, family dinners, premieres—that strip away comfort zones.
Symbolic Use of Family, Food, and Found Home
Again and again, Mara finds herself invited into (and fearing) Jonas's family rituals. Pancake breakfasts, roast dinners, and even grocery shopping are transformed into potent emotional sites where Mara tests and learns trust, acceptance, and what it means to build a home from scratch.
Repetition, Echo, and Closure
Kisses and confessions recur, changing in content and meaning as Mara and Jonas each drop their defenses. Mara's perpetual returns—physically and emotionally—become hopeful, not just fearful, as she at last chooses to "stay" instead of fleeing.
Letters, Notes, and Written Word as Healing
Letters (from Mara's father, Mara's notes to Jonas's family, texts between friends) anchor the story's core message: that narrative isn't just escape, but the daily rewriting of our own "happy endings." Mara's final acceptance as a TV writer, and Jonas's quitting his job to create a partnership, are both acts of rewriting—literal and metaphorical—for a better reality.