Are you in Canada? Click here to proceed to the HK Canada website.

For all other locations, click here to continue to the HK US website.

Human Kinetics Logo

Purchase Courses or Access Digital Products

If you are looking to purchase online videos, online courses or to access previously purchased digital products please press continue.

Mare Nostrum Logo

Purchase Print Products or eBooks

Human Kinetics print books and eBooks are now distributed by Mare Nostrum, throughout the UK, Europe, Africa and Middle East, delivered to you from their warehouse. Please visit our new UK website to purchase Human Kinetics printed or eBooks.

Feedback Icon Feedback Get $15 Off

The Summer I Turned Pretty S02e04 Dthrip Hot! [LATEST]

Conrad is trying to buy the house himself, working a financial miracle alone. His walls are up so high they’ve got their own atmosphere. When Belly confronts him (“Why didn’t you tell us?”), he doesn’t explode—he erodes . Chris Briney plays the scene with a jaw so tight you feel the screws of responsibility grinding his teeth down. His “I’m handling it” is code for “I’m drowning but refuse to let go of the anchor.”

If Episode 3 was the wrecking ball, Episode 4 is the slow, silent walk through the rubble. Belly, Jeremiah, and Conrad must band together to save the beach house from being sold—but first, they have to survive a flashback to the last good summer, a painful game of truth-or-dare, and the quiet realization that Susannah’s magic can’t stop real estate vultures. the summer i turned pretty s02e04 dthrip

Jeremiah has always been the sunshine, but this episode lets the clouds roll in. He’s angry—not just at the house being sold, but at Conrad for shutting him out, at Belly for being caught in the middle, and at himself for not seeing Susannah’s decline sooner. His truth-or-dare confession (“I’m tired of being the one who smiles through everything”) is the episode’s emotional bullseye. Team Jeremiah stans, this is your painful meal. Conrad is trying to buy the house himself,

🍹🍹🍹🍹 (4 out of 5 shots – goes down smooth, hits hard hours later) Chris Briney plays the scene with a jaw

The episode opens not with grief, but with its echo: a memory of Susannah alive, hosting a Fourth of July party. She’s laughing, pouring lemonade, orchestrating a game of “truth or dare” like a benevolent puppeteer. It’s devastating precisely because it’s warm. We know she’s gone. The boys know. Belly knows. But for 90 seconds, the show lets us pretend—then rips the bandage off.