Lyren (rhymes with “siren”) Valence was supposed to have it all figured out. At 22, cloaked in cords and honors, she grabbed her diploma, beaming with hope and pride that would carry her into the next phase of her life. She was going to become a journalist, researching education issues, publishing Pulitzer-worthy political insights, and of course, she would marry her perfect long-term boyfriend and have a few beautiful little children.
But that was four years ago. At 26, she’s waking up with a debilitating hangover, naked—and in the wrong bed. The bed of her best friend’s playboy older brother to be exact.
So much for the plan.
Now stuck in a “temporary” cubicle job that turned permanent, and crushing under the pressure of her friends’ weddings, and her parents’ (and society’s) expectations, Lyren throws herself into late nights, bad decisions, and a messy “friends with benefits” fling that only makes her feel further from the person she thought she’d be.
Between questionable new priorities and a few too many vodka sodas, Lyren is forced to confront what she’s been running from: herself. Along the way to rediscovering her own spark, there are friends who support her even at her worst, a string of new dates, Jarron, the impossible but endearing teen she tutors, and the chance—just maybe—for something worth growing up for.
This Fine Line is a sharp, funny, and painfully relatable story about ambition, disappointment, and the complicated beauty of navigating early adulthood—one mistake, one heartbreak, and one wild night at a time. With unflinching honesty, it explores the fragile balance between who we thought we’d be and who we might still become.