Kulti -

⭐⭐⭐⭐.5/5 Trope highlights: Sports romance, grumpy/sunshine, slow burn, age gap, enemies to lovers (reluctant allies to friends to lovers).

So, when the Houston Mustangs announce their new assistant coach—a grumpy, retired, and surprisingly arrogant Reiner Kulti—Sal is devastated. The man she idolized turns out to be a rude, dismissive jerk who barely speaks to her.

The Wall of Winnipeg and Me (also by Zapata), From Lukov with Love , or any romance where the first kiss happens after page 300. ⭐⭐⭐⭐

What follows is a season of grueling training, snarky banter, and a very slow thaw. Kulti, impressed by Sal’s raw talent and work ethic (which he initially refuses to acknowledge), begins to see her not as a fangirl, but as an equal. As a friend. And eventually, as something much more. 1. The True Slow Burn If you want instant love, look elsewhere. Kulti is the literary equivalent of watching ice melt in the Arctic. The "I love yous" don’t drop until the 90% mark. Zapata forces the reader to live in the tension—the sideways glances, the shared car rides home, the inside jokes about aliens. The payoff is emotional and explosive because you’ve earned it.

Zapata clearly did her homework. The book respects the physicality of women’s soccer. Sal deals with injuries, team politics, sexist fans, and the terrifying reality that a career in sports has a short shelf life. It’s not just a backdrop; the sport is a character in itself. The Wall of Winnipeg and Me (also by

While many books use the grumpy hero/sunshine heroine trope, Kulti flips it slightly. Sal is the gritty, foul-mouthed, passionate one. Kulti is the stoic, emotionally constipated, grumpy German who communicates in single syllables. When he finally cracks a smile or says something tender, it feels like winning the lottery.

Reiner Kulti is a German soccer legend. Think of him as the Miroslav Klose of Zapata’s world: a World Cup-winning, iconic forward who was Sal’s childhood hero. Posters on her wall. The reason she wears the number 7 jersey. The whole deal. As a friend

It’s a book that will make you want to kick a soccer ball, learn German insults, and find a grumpy former athlete to call your own.