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Smitten: Romantic Obsession, the Neuroscience of Limerence, and How To Make Love Last

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A groundbreaking exploration of the psychology of infatuation, how to recognize it, and how to move beyond it towards a healthier experience of love.

“Butterflies” in the stomach, intrusive thoughts, fantasies about imaginary scenarios, mood swings from euphoria to despair… aren't these all the familiar hallmarks of new love? Not quite. These are characteristics of the psychological state of “limerence,” also known as obsessive, passionate or addictive love that can become unhealthy.

Millions of people experience limerence at some point in their life, and in this book, neuroscientist Dr Tom Bellamy explores advances in neuroscience since the term was coined in the 1970s, and sheds light on this little-understood element of the human experience.

· what drives limerence

· how to recognize limerence in yourself and others

· how to manage the phases of addiction to another person

· how to move past it to sustain longer, more fulfilling relationships.

With supportive advice about next steps, this book will help readers struggling with unwanted feelings to find emotional equilibrium. Rooted in neuroscience, this book offers practical guidance for those experiencing obsessive love and seeking emotional balance.

224 pages, Hardcover

Published April 8, 2025

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About the author

Tom Bellamy

1 book17 followers
Tom Bellamy is an academic neuroscientist and Associate Professor at the University of Nottingham in the UK. His research involves studying the fundamental mechanisms of the brain (the nuts and bolts of synaptic signaling), but he also writes about how this fundamental neuroscience can make sense of the experience of limerence. He has blogged at Livingwithlimerence.com for seven years under the pseudonym "Dr L" but has now decided to step out of the shadows with the publication of a new book "Smitten" that summarizes everything he's learned about limerence over the years.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 32 reviews
Profile Image for Sarah Luna.
26 reviews
August 4, 2025
While the author appears to make a sincere attempt to offer insights into the neural mechanisms and definitions of “limerance”, the book falters when interpreting emotional, relational, and therapeutic dynamics that are best understood through lived clinical practice. Neuroscience explains how the brain reacts; psychotherapy explores why the mind suffers and how it heals.

Without any personal grounding in the therapeutic process, the author’s conclusions often oversimplify or misrepresent the complex human experience. He then greatly oversteps by ending the book with chapters on self-care, which includes misguided advice on how to deprogram yourself from your “limerant object” — because apparently the human psyche is little more than a faulty computer to this guy. He mentions therapy as a potentially helpful tool but then disparages it in the very same chapter — a damaging choice from someone who is ironically attempting to teach psychology when they are neither a psychologist nor a legit professor. This book may have had some real potential if only they had sought out a writing partnership with a licensed and seasoned psychotherapist who has earned their expertise.
Profile Image for Jim Parker.
355 reviews31 followers
June 17, 2025
This is a book I wish I’d had available to me earlier in life when I was prone to developing impossible infatuations. As it is, this is still a fascinating read. Neuroscientist Dr Tom Bellamy examines the phenomenon known as ‘limerence’ - the tendency among some people to develop obsessive, passionate crushes on others to the point their lives spin out of control and they lose all perspective.

The word ‘limerence’ - which is something more than a common garden crush - was coined only relatively recently. It was defined first in the 1970s by psychologist Dorothy Tennov to describe a mental state of profound romantic infatuation. The inspiration for countless novels, movies and pop songs, Limerence is characterised among sufferers by an initial period of elation and intense emotional arousal that can progress to an involuntary, obsessive craving for another person.

A serial self-confessed victim of limerence himself, Bellamy began an anonymous blog about it seven years ago. ‘Living with Limerence’ detailed the neuroscience driving the almost addictive craving for another - often unobtainable - person. Bellamy’s blog became so popular that he decided to write a book on the subject based on his own experience, professional knowledge and the feedback of his readers.

As with many non-fiction works these days, this is far too long. The last half devolves into a self-help book for limerent sufferers. But the first half, in which Bellamy describes the science behind limerent longing, is fascinating. Apparently, susceptibility to limerence is linked to your attachment style to your mother as a young child. Anxious attachers - those who were left feeling insecure about parental love - are more likely to fall victim to limerence. Triggers related to arousal, reward and bonding drive the process forward. Ultimately, our dopamine circuits (the drive for reward) turn desire into obsession. From painful personal experience, this made absolute sense to me.

“There really are some people who activate our neural circuits in just the right way to send us into a reward-reinforcement cycle that is easy to slip into but fearsome to escape,” Bellamy writes. “Turns out, brains can be dumb.”
Profile Image for Jamie Josephson.
138 reviews11 followers
October 21, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for providing an ARC of Smitten by Tom Bellamy in exchange for honest feedback.

This was an incredibly interesting read. Would highly recommend reading this to that anyone that tends to overthink their interactions during the dating process. There are so many nuances described throughout this read that helped explain common behaviors and guide you through navigating better ways to handle future interactions.

Even if you do not exhibit these thoughts and/or behaviors yourself, it helps to explain how to recognize the behavior in others and help to react in ways that are productive and meaningful.

Great read overall.
Profile Image for Jenn "JR".
617 reviews114 followers
September 19, 2025
I came to Smitten curious about the psychology of limerence — that intense, euphoric, often obsessive state that masquerades as love. While I don’t doubt limerence exists, this book offers more breadth than depth. It’s readable and occasionally insightful, but lacks original research and leans heavily on secondary sources. For a book that claims to explore the neuroscience of love, it feels more like pop psychology than rigorous analysis.

One of the book’s core issues is that it tries to do too much for too many audiences. Is it a basic primer on limerence? A neuroscience explainer? A self-help guide for people suffering from limerent obsession? It’s unclear. These goals could have been better served by splitting the material into separate books or at least distinct sections with more focus. As it stands, Smitten reads more like a collection of long blog posts than a cohesive, well-structured work.

Bellamy is clear that limerence is not a mental illness:

“Experiencing limerence is not a symptom of mental illness, a psychological wound or an emotional failing. For most limerents it is a normal part of the process of falling in love, albeit with a force that has a fierce and alarming power.” (Chapter 5)

He also addresses attachment theory, noting that while limerence is often associated with anxious attachment, it’s not exclusive to it:

“More than half of the population who do not have an anxious attachment style are limerents. But—and it is a big but!—eight out of ten people who have anxious attachments are limerents.” (Chapter 6)


Bellamy introduces a taxonomy of archetypes who supposedly attract limerent individuals — the damsel in distress, tortured soul, agent of chaos, bad boy/girl, the rock, the leader, the guru, the free spirit, the mysterious stranger. These are interesting sketches, but the framing implies intentional manipulation. In reality, these people may just be living out their own unresolved narratives. As I wrote in my notes: “Maybe they just have their own movie going.”

One of the few moments that rang true for me was in Chapter 14, where Bellamy writes:

“Limerence fades. Regardless of how spectacular the thrills are at the beginning of a relationship, expecting that euphoric connection to last more than a few months is unrealistic. Quite apart from how exhausting it would become, it doesn't make sense from an evolutionary perspective. Limerence is the drive to form a pair bond tight enough to result in conception; it has no real role in making it last.”

This echoed something I told an ex who broke up with me after more than two years together because “we get along too well, you’re too nice to me.” We were compatible intellectually, physically, emotionally — but they said, “I love you, but I’m not in love with you.” When I asked what being in love meant to him, they described a pattern of unreciprocated obsession that lasted “until they blocked my number/stopped speaking to me.” That’s not romance — that’s limerence as compulsion.

Chapter 15 is even titled “I love you but I’m not in love with you,” but instead of exploring the emotional fallout of that statement, it focuses on infidelity and the vulnerability of limerent individuals to extramarital obsession. It’s a missed opportunity to unpack how limerence can sabotage healthy relationships — not because the partner is lacking, but because the limerent person is chasing a feeling that’s unsustainable.

In Chapter 16, Bellamy suggests channeling limerent energy into self-improvement. This reminded me of my ex’s cycles of intense infatuation — not just with people, but with hobbies. He would dive deep into culinary knives and sharpening techniques, then Afro-Cuban drumming, then pottery. These weren’t casual interests; they were full-blown obsessions. I can’t help but see a connection between limerence and adult ADHD — especially the dopamine-driven novelty-seeking, emotional impulsivity, and hyperfocus that characterize both.

Chapter 17 introduces a “recovery mindset,” reminding readers that “limerence is happening in your head” — that it’s the limerent person who makes the object seem special. Bellamy advises readers to “check your instincts,” avoid self-medication, and accept that you can’t “just be friends” with a limerent object. He encourages building a life of purpose, listing traits like honesty, self-awareness, openness to renewal, courage to face discomfort, an internal locus of control, decisiveness, and action orientation.

“Creating a life without limerence... may not be as flashy and exciting as the thrills of limerence, but it is a deeper, more profound contentment. Finding a purpose, a goal you care about, a vision of what your life could be like if you took control of your destiny, shifts you from a state of passive dependency to one of active motivation. Living with purpose means you stop depending on the LO for comfort, stop following their lead, stop letting their behavior dictate your mood.”

This is solid advice — and probably the book’s strongest section — but it comes late and without much psychological depth. Bellamy doesn’t explore how neurodivergence, trauma, or attachment styles might shape limerent behavior. Nor does he offer tools for people who are in relationships with limerents — those of us who are “too nice,” too stable, too real to compete with the fantasy.

In the end, Smitten is readable and occasionally insightful, but it left me wanting more. More research, more nuance, more empathy for the people caught in the wake of limerent obsession. It made me want to revisit Dorothy Tennov’s original work — and to seek out more rigorous writing on the psychology of love, obsession, and neurodivergence.

REVIEW: Smitten by Tom Bellamy

RATING: 2.5 stars

© Jennifer R Clark. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. You may share and adapt this content with proper attribution.

Profile Image for Natalie K.
616 reviews32 followers
July 5, 2025
Very interesting book about limerence, or obsession about another person that is often romantic. Reading about others' experiences was fascinating, as were the author's tips for getting out of limerence. I deducted a star for the poor writing: there was a lot of "try and", which sounds terrible. For example, you shouldn't say, "I will try and forget him." It's supposed to be, "I will try to forget him."

Thanks to NetGalley for the free review copy.
Profile Image for Nicola.
94 reviews13 followers
October 2, 2025
Definitely intrigued by the initial premise of limerance as a psychological term encapsulating how some experience 'falling in love', but there are some glaring gaps in the research here. For one thing, half of what the term is meant to describe (according to Bellamy) has already been established as part of attachment patterning. It's not new information and doesn't really fit with what's being hypothesised here. I also don't understand how Bellamy can separate aspects of limerance, as described by him, as separate from characteristics of stalking.
Further, more comprehensive and far more specialised research is definitely needed. I do want to know more about the experiential differences, and I am frankly fascinated by the dividing line between falling in love and romantic obsession, and at what point it becomes something more akin to stalking. It's an area worth looking into, and so begs the question as to why Bellamy was so keen to decry the connection.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
603 reviews44 followers
July 2, 2025
I received an ARC copy of this book in exchange for a review from NetGalley. I had never heard of the term Limerence before, but I love Non-fiction psychology books so I figured I would give it a try. The book opens with a handy questionnaire where you can determine your love style. Limerence is a style of love where you become preoccupied by biological impulses to pair-bond. When you experience limerence, your mind obsesses over your new love interest (Limerent object) in order to try to successfully reproduce. Unfortunately, sometimes this causes chaos. In a world with social media, it can lead to anxiety-inducing behavior where you try everything to make sure your love interest loves you back. The problem with this is sometimes it causes unbalance in relationships. The book explains that the beginnings of Limerence are basically the best feelings of the world, but when the relationship is not healthy, Limerence can cause jealousy, frustration, difficulty adjusting during breakups, and in worse-case scenarios, can lead to adultery. At first, I found the book very interesting. There aren't too many synonyms for the word limerence, so reading the book becomes a task in repetitiveness. The last chapters become more self-help with the author advising the best way to live your life is to live a life of purpose. The book was split into three parts. Overall, I thought the book was interesting, but I didn't fully connect with its purpose. It seemed to me that if you took the quiz and realized you live with limerence, the book cautioned that you need to be careful because you can destroy your life and everything you care about really easily. I especially did not like the chapter where you had to challenge your belief system by purposely recalling negative memories and chanting to yourself "I will not be limerent". The book also tried to be two things: a guide for people who do not experience limerence to understand it better and a cautionary tale for those who do experience it to avoid pitfalls in their romantic life. Sometimes, I think the tone was harsh towards those experiencing limerence.
Profile Image for Ribena Beetroot.
35 reviews1 follower
October 12, 2025
3.75/5.

I listened to the audiobook and so I appreciate I might have got more out this book if I'd been reading it the more traditional way. Even so, I found it a great summary of the neuroscience behind limerence, as well as including various limerents' first-hand experiences in their own words, cognitive-behavioural formulations of limerence and strategies for how to manage it and extinguish it effectively. I really appreciated the frequent reality checks aimed to challenge limerent thinking/mental gymnastics.

I did, however, find the narration quite frustrating - it wasn't read by the author, and it felt like it was read by someone who didn't fully understand the experience of limerence and so was reading it more like a story or as if limerence was some sort of interesting curiosity- that irked me a bit. Especially when I contrast it with another audiobook I've been listening to (Decluttering at the Speed of Life), narrated excellently and meaningfully by the author, in a way that seems to speak directly to you from a place of deep understanding and "getting it". This book could really benefit from that.

The only other think I wanted more of was a bit more depth. Maybe it's because I've read articles on the author's website and found them, as well as the rich discussion in the comments, so useful and specific to certain aspects of limerence, and this book felt like a more generalised and marketed version of that. Also, potentially beyond the scope of this book, I would have liked some deeper exploration into the psychological needs from a schema-informed/parts work perspective, as I think this is very relevant to working with this presentation. As this book was clearly designed to help self-identified limerents understand and work through their own challenges with limerence, it makes sense there wasn't so much acknowledgement of the role "limerence" as we understand it these days, has played in literature, art and mythology across cultures, and the fact that one person's limerence is another person's falling in love, but I did find the formulation of limerence a bit too clinical on the whole. Even though it was acknowledged as a "normal" aspect of many people's experience of attraction, and beneficial aspects were explored, the way it was formulated and the thrust of the book (understandably) treated it more like an aberration and a "trick of the mind" rather than exploring any deeper significance, perhaps considering any such exploration as a the mind's attempt at justifying acting on limerence. Maybe it's just limerent delusion, but my sense is that there's something deeper going on.

*Edit: interestingly, days after finishing this book, I read Inner Gold: Understanding Psychological Projection by Robert A. Johnson and it was exactly what I found myself searching for at the end of Smitten. A much more intuitive and mythical approach to limerence (which isn't mentioned specifically but is very much an example of "putting your inner gold" onto another). Inner Gold doesn't pathologise the experience so much (very much sees it as something with a sacred purpose in fact), but agrees on the risks of confusing it for a romantic relationship. A very interesting contrast in approach.
Profile Image for Ren Parks.
93 reviews3 followers
August 22, 2025
Reading this felt like a gun to my head — in a good way for the most part.

Even as a self-help book skeptic, I learned a lot, and it was affirming to read about limerence from an empathetic perspective.

The entire book felt like it was building up to the last few chapters, where potential solutions and coping mechanisms were to be explored. Unfortunately, these felt like the least developed chapters, often going in circles and lacking examples.

That said, I’d still recommend it as a starting point for people absolutely at wit’s end over repeated unhealthy fixations… and then maybe therapy?

Thanks to MacMillan Publishers for the advance copy.
Profile Image for Morgan Brown.
254 reviews2 followers
November 27, 2025
This ARC was truly a Godsend, because only He could have known how badly I needed to read this.

Let’s get group therapy started. Hi, I’m Morgan (*Hi Morgan*), and I’m a limerent.

What being limerent means is that when I fall, I fall hard. It’s all-consuming, exhilarating, and makes me feel like I’m on top of the world. But it also causes me to think about nothing but that person, which can impede everyday life. And because my particular limerent object bounces between giving me glimmers of hope and giving me the cold shoulder, the uncertainty of it all also causes me immense anxiety, the intensity messes with my psyche, and the taboo nature makes me scared to talk about it. (I could go on, but that’s a story better saved for livingwithlimerence.com.)

In my most recent bout of limerence, a two-year stint that has made me deeply consider therapy, I reached my highest highs and lowest lows, and in those lows, I thought I was alone and that no one would understand the kind of mental battle I’m waging between knowing that something is wrong for me yet still seeking it with my whole heart.

Enter this book. Now, not only do I know I’m not alone, but I also know that over 50% of people in the US have felt this depth of romantic obsession before.

Most of the time, I find these types of self-help books useless, like when you struggle with anxiety and someone’s brilliant solution is “Well just stop feeling anxious :)”

Thankfully, this author recognizes that limerence isn’t really something you can just stop… and in fact, cutting a limerent object out of your life can be incredibly painful.

I found this book informative, empathetic yet honest, and helpful in identifying a sensation that over half the population feels but can’t name. It provides a succinct yet thorough explanation of the brain science of limerence, how it often manifests, and tricks to train your brain into getting over it.

I know this made me think about my limerence differently, and I’ve already recommended it to several friends who could use it, too.
Profile Image for Brandi.
388 reviews19 followers
November 1, 2025
This book did a great job explaining what limerance is, and why we might find ourself engaging in the pattern. I think the book could improve by giving better ways to overcome it.

I think this book is good for both those who are new to the concept, or for those who are already on their healing journey to understand the “why” better.

Thank you Net Galley and Macmillan Audio for an advanced audiobook copy of this book!
Profile Image for Meenal.
1,018 reviews27 followers
Read
November 8, 2025
DNF 72%

Self-help authors need to understand that people who read a book on the topic already know what it is. They know they're depressed/lonely/etc. Why does more than half of the book explain why people are lonely? They already are! Just explain how to fix it - that's what the audience wants to read. But people get so bored reading the explanation that they don't even read the section that's relevant
Profile Image for Kristen.
844 reviews5 followers
September 7, 2025
The title of this book instantly had me intrigued and I had to request an arc! Overall the theory of limerence and the research on romantic love was very interesting. I found some parts repetitive but really enjoyed the neuroscience and felt it was very well researched and all resources were cited and provided well.

A lot of the book really resonated with me and I wouldn’t mind a re-read one day to absorb even more of the information! It’s definitely worth the read, and explains everything about what’s happening at a scientific level when you feel in love, obsessed with someone and even unrequited love.

Thanks for the arc St Martins Press!
Profile Image for Michelle.
18 reviews7 followers
July 6, 2025
I wanted to read this book because I'm interested in the neuroscience of emotions and I'd never heard of limerence before. I'm glad I got to learn about something new and this put a lot of my friends' behavior in college into perspective, however I had a very hard time staying focused while reading this book. To me, the writing just was not as engaging as it could have been, though perhaps part of the problem is that I don't believe I experience limerence myself. If this was something more applicable to my own life, I think I would have enjoyed the book more.

Still, thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for the ARC!
Profile Image for Rachel White.
248 reviews9 followers
October 26, 2025
Initially I was very intrigued by the concept of limerence and I also was curious if maybe I could identify with this! This book definitely did help me to identify that I don’t have limerence, but unfortunately that means that about 60% of the book was actually not appealing/helpful for me. I think if you do struggle with limerence, this book could be really helpful for you, but I ended up just skimming through a good bit of it. This is a non-fiction book that reads like a text book, but it’s very well researched and could be very helpful for some people.
Thank you NetGalley and St.Martins for this advanced copy
Profile Image for Steve Ellerhoff.
Author 12 books58 followers
July 31, 2025
Incisive portrait of limerence, an under-researched psychological state of having an intense, crushing addiction to another person. Tom Bellamy's neuroscience angle on it is enlightening, as is his insight from many years running a website where people share their experiences of limerence. The landing's a little soft toward the end, but hopefully this book will spur discussion and legitimize limerence for anyone suspecting it isn't a thing.
Profile Image for G Flores.
146 reviews5 followers
November 24, 2025
This was a difficult book for me to review. Starting from what the author himself admits has been a fraught area of academic inquiry - romantic love - and continuing into the fact that I am immediately suspicious of any author who writes a book that makes such heavy references to their own blog or YouTube channel, this book was facing an uphill battle for credulity with me. Throw in the fact that this is the author's first book and I had a difficult time locating his "40+" academic papers through my college's web portal beyond an article in The Observer, and I became a very skeptical reader. That being said, Bellamy is appropriately measured in the book, provides some reasons for why he may be wrong and defends his position, and admits openly that his various sample sizes are rife with selection bias among other things. This went a long way to assuaging my apprehension.

Which is to say, there were some good ideas and insights to be found in this book. Not having experienced "limerence" myself (a sort of overwhelming infatuation), I will admit that some of the content of the book seemed very silly to me. That feeling was tempered as I got further through it and recognized some of the signs of "limerant" behavior in two of my former partners. Realizing that I had likely been their "limerant object" put some aspects of those relationships into a new context for me and I found myself wishing that I'd read this book 15 years ago so that I would be better equipped to understand what they were going through.

The simple fact that I could relate some of the evidence to personal experience means nothing by itself but the insight into those relationships that such ideas provided me are helpful regardless of whether this is "good" or "junk" science. By the end, I couldn't say that I was personally convinced of anything more than that this was an interesting area of research and that I looked forward to seeing whether there was any fruit to be borne of it. Despite the fact that I've never heard of limerence and that many limerent individuals who seek therapy have had therapists and psychologists who'd never heard of limerence either, I was surprised to find that there is a good bit of scholarship on the subject beyond Tennov's original book and Bellamy's latest contribution.

And so I finally come to the same place I imagine many psychologists and other outside observers of limerence have come to before me: I sincerely don't know what to make of the subject matter or this book. The fact that limerence can wreak such havoc on an individual's life makes it worth studying in order to best help people for whom limerence has become a problem. Its place outside of recognized behavioral or mental disorders makes it hard to take as anything other than a character trait and "some people fall in love REAL bad" sounds almost trite in the grand scheme of things.

Despite that, I am inclined to agree with one of the latter chapters of Bellamy's book in which he weirdly chastises psychologists for not knowing about limerence. While the chapter comes off as a bit anti-therapy, his basic assertion is correct: mental health professionals should probably have heard of this at the least. If it is nothing else, it is a useful lens through which to see the difficulties some may suffer because of extreme infatuation.

Ultimately, I would recommend this book for anyone who has suffered from extreme, overwhelming infatuation or has felt that they were ever the subject of extreme, overwhelming infatuation.

Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan audio for advanced access to this audiobook scheduled to be published February 3, 2026 at time of writing.
Profile Image for Erin Clemence.
1,537 reviews416 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 24, 2025
Special thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for a free, electronic ARC of this novel received in exchange for an honest review.

Expected publication date: Feb. 3, 2026

“Limerence”, defined by Dorothy Tennov, the sociologist who coined the term, is a “mental state of profound, involuntary, obsessive, romantic infatuation with another person”. In his book, “Smitten: Romantic Obsession, the Neuroscience of Limerence, and How to Make Love Last”, neuroscientist Tom Bellamy examines this phenomenon, first coined in the 1970s, and looks at it through a modern lens.

Bellamy’s non-fiction book is an examination of love, from those who have experienced limerence and those who have not. The “glimmer”, the initial, powerful connection that we have with a potential partner, is the beginning of limerence and, depending on several factors, including your personality traits, which Bellamy explains in the book, limerence can turn into an obsessive addiction- an addiction to a potential romantic partner, whether they reciprocate or not.

The experience of love is individual, in my opinion, although it shares common factors with much of the human race, regardless of gender or sexuality, but Bellamy uses his neuroscience background to explain how the brain processes feelings of affection, and how limerence can easily turn into addiction. “Smitten” is a book designed for those who tend to fall into the more “obsessive” category of romantic relationships, who find themselves falling for those they can’t have, and whose dedication to their LO (Limerent Object) is beyond next level. Bellamy explains all the physiological characteristics of limerence (I will call it ‘obsessive love’), including tips on how to escape a limerence cycle safely and in a healthy way, for both parties.

It was challenging for me to read this book because I do not believe in the idea of ‘limerence’. Obviously, being in love looks different for many people, and involves an initial rush of infatuation and attraction, but love that turns obsessive is dangerous, for the person who experiences it and the person who is on the receiving end. Giving it a name simplifies it, and makes it seem like it is something completely within the spectrum of love. Bellamy is clear that many people, especially those who don’t experience limerence, feel this way about it, and he obviously doesn’t support illegal or immoral relationships in any capacity, but I felt like he was justifying obsessive love because the obsessed was just “born that way”.

I was intrigued by the neuroscience of love and why we, as humans, seek to mate monogamously for life, and Bellamy does provide that information. But I think I am on the fence on the belief that limerence is actually part of the love spectrum, and Bellamy’s book did not make me a believer.

“Smitten” is an intriguing book for those who tend to fall hard and fast in love and who tend to show inappropriate, obsessive behaviours as Bellamy provides solutions as to how to have healthy, adaptive relationships with others but it doesn’t really resonate with someone like me, who has a “boring and vanilla” type of responsible, comfortable, mature and requited love relationship.
Profile Image for Kate Laycoax .
1,450 reviews14 followers
June 24, 2025
Well, I really could’ve used this book back in the day. Like, a lot. It might’ve saved me from a few heartbreaks (okay, maybe more than a few) and helped me spot the giant waving red flags I somehow managed to miss while floating through one hopeless infatuation after another. If you've ever spiraled into a full blown crush that took over your brain like a rom com villain with a dopamine gun, then yeah, this book gets it.

In Smitten, neuroscientist Dr. Tom Bellamy dives into “limerence,” a term that sounds fancy but basically means “the kind of obsessive, all consuming crush that hijacks your life”. It’s not just butterflies and daydreaming; it’s a legit psychological state, one that can turn into a full blown emotional rollercoaster. Tom Bellamy, a self-confessed serial limerent, brings both personal experience and scientific insight to the table in a way that’s surprisingly relatable and deeply validating.

The first half of the book was really fascinating. The author unpacks how our brains (and specifically, our reward systems) can latch onto someone and refuse to let go. Spoiler: it might go all the way back to our attachment styles with our parents. Turns out, those of us with anxious attachment are more likely to fall into limerence traps. (It's me, hi. I'm the problem, it's me). The mix of personal anecdotes, brain science, and “oh wow, that explains everything” moments really hit home.

The second half shifts more into self-help mode, which I did appreciate. That section dragged a bit for me, but it still has value, especially if you’re currently knee deep in limerence and looking for a way out. The author offers solid tools for breaking the cycle and finding more stable, grounded relationships.

Honestly, if you’ve ever wondered why one look, one smile, or one text can send you into an emotional tailspin, Smitten offers the clarity you didn’t know you needed. It’s like therapy with a side of neuroscience, and a reminder that our brains are sometimes just a little bit dumb when it comes to love.

Thank you to NetGalley, Tom Bellamy, and St. Martin's Essentials for the eARC of this book.
Profile Image for Jeff.
1,745 reviews162 followers
December 30, 2025
Weird Blend Of Neuroscience And Self-Help Lacks Critically Necessary Documentation. This book is fascinating in a lot of ways, and could genuinely help some people, but its critical flaw is also its biggest: showing up at just 12% documentation - at least in the Advance Review Copy edition I read over a month before publication (and which I've had for several weeks already before getting to it) when you're proposing a novel diagnosis of neuroscience fails the Sagan Standard (extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence) pretty damn badly.

Now, for what the book actually covers... "weird" is actually putting it nicely. This is a novel blend of science and self help unlike any I've ever personally come across, and I read literally hundreds of books per year. (Admittedly across nearly all genres and not just in the neuroscience/ self-help spaces.)

Both the science and the self-help seem reasonable enough to a layman who simply reads a lot, though I'm nearly positive both actual neuroscientists and psychologists may have more choice words and harsher criticism there. But again, the severely lacking documentation, knowing this is such a novel concept... I mean, I only removed one star because that's what I do for lack of documentation, but the case really could be made that the lack of documentation combined with the novel claims here are a much bigger problem than a single star deduction. But read the book for yourself and write your own review and let's see what you think there.

Overall it is an interesting and very easy to read book (at least for those accustomed to reading popular neuroscience type books), I'm just not sure I would trust what it says any further than I could physically throw the book.

Recommended. But think critically about it.
Profile Image for Lyndzi.
56 reviews1 follower
November 7, 2025
Thank you NetGalley for giving me the opportunity to review this audiobook!
Limernce, the science of infatuated love. I definitely feel limernce, which I've always called "new relationship energy"/ NRE, and I've joked that it can be addictive. Like eating a cocaine-laced cupcake -- I feel high, excited, and bouncy -- yet it can be equal parts lovely and devastating. I didn't know that other people don't feel this!
The question posed, is limernce a mental disorder is also an interesting one. It absolutely can distract a person from real life, maybe even in a detrimental way, but it is also usually fleeting/ temporary.
One of my only questions I wish was investigated further in this text was that they claim limerance can only be experienced with 1 person at a time, but I was left wondering if they studied polyamorous people at all in this studies? I just don't think that this claim is necessarily is true of all people. If limerance can technically last up to or beyond a full year, it is very possibly for a poly person to be in the middle of limerance with one partner and start it with another. Maybe unlikely, but the book claims it's impossible. I'd love further study into this phenomenon with folks who identify as polyam/ ethically non-monogamous.
As a self-identified Limernt, this was very interesting and inspired a lot of self reflection. Great book for people who love big and love hard!
Profile Image for Jade (beauty.andherbooks).
517 reviews51 followers
November 11, 2025
1st Read: ★★★★.5
Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for the ALC in exchange for an honest review!

All the delulu girlies need to read this book because it was very eye-opening.

-I picked this up because I'd heard briefly about the idea of limerence through Instagram, but I definitely wanted to learn more.
-I felt called out in a good way. The book listed specific behaviors of limerence that I've definitely done in the past. Having read this book, I know what to be on the lookout for to prevent limerence in the future. I also liked how there were specific examples of how to get out of the limerent phase.
-Because I didn't have a physical copy to follow along with (not the author's fault), I felt a bit lost a couple of times, especially because the book was on the longer side for an audiobook.

Audiobook: I really enjoyed the narrator! I definitely want to purchase a physical copy so I can follow along with the audio and make notes!
Profile Image for Tahni.
284 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 25, 2025
A deep dive into the state of limerence geared toward the affected. Explanations overlapped with topics such as obsession and bipolar disorder, interacting with narcissists, and attachment styles, all of which I found fascinating.

Before reading I didn't realize there are some people who experience this state repeatedly throughout their lives in all or many of their romantic relationships, and there are many who never experience it. So, we may be experiencing love in a totally different way than our partners and friends!

The narrator was serious and well-suited to the content.

I would recommend this to folks who find themselves with obsessive crushes or toxic attractions, and those fascinated with psychology and unbalanced romantic relationship dynamics.

Thanks to Macmillan Audio, NetGalley, and author Tom Bellamy for this audio copy to honestly review. It will be available in February.
Profile Image for Paige.
245 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
December 29, 2025
While I thought this book would cover more about general infatuation and love, it focused specifically on the concept of limerence, which I had not heard of before. Since I was coming in without any background information, I thought the book was overall interesting and made some good points, but it seems that there should be more research done in this area. The author notes that this is an area that is hard to gather research and does reference some issues, which makes me trust the work a little more. I found this book to be set up more of a self-help type book, which was not really relevant to me (that is on me for not fully reading the description/subtitle of the book). I could see this being a good resource for those wondering if they experience limerence and for those who care for those with limerence tendencies.

Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press/St. Martin's Essentials for the ARC!
Profile Image for Kim.
170 reviews1 follower
November 26, 2025
Thank you to NetGalley and St Martins Press for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.

I’m so glad I picked this one up and stuck with it. The first few chapters were very dense and felt like reading a textbook at times. I have a background in cognitive neuroscience and even for me it got a bit weighty at times, which I really enjoyed but I could see it being off putting for someone without any neurology background. Once pushed past the neurons, the rest of the book was engaging and eye opening and really made me think differently about how I’ve approached my own love life in the past. Overall a good read that I’m going to need to sit with and reflect on for a little while.
Profile Image for Anne Jisca.
243 reviews6 followers
November 1, 2025
I requested this book as an ARC from NetGalley, as I had never heard of limerence before. I find the idea fascinating, and looked forward to reading this book as I process my own past, and how I got in the marriage I was in for 18 years. As I reflect, journal, and think ahead of possible future dating, I wanted to read this book. Unfortunately, it was not really what I expected. I must not be the target audience, which is fine! It was very dry information, and I found it hard to get through for myself. It seemed interesting, just not a book I personally connected with.
5 reviews
November 22, 2025
I received an advance reader copy through a Goodreads giveaway. The book is good overall. The first 3 chapters are interesting and provided a lot of new information. The remaining chapters of part 1 are useless for anyone who has taken even a couple introductory psychology courses. Some of the conclusions drawn in the book regarding relation to mental health conditions seem presumptive. Overall, it was a good read. However, it felt as though it dragged on/that there were some unnecessary chapters. It could have been better if it were more focused.
87 reviews
July 9, 2025
I received a free copy of this book to review. I typically really enjoy nonfiction books about the brain and relationships. However, I found this one to be a bit dry. I felt like I was reading an expanded dissertation on limerence and its commonality. Although, it was interesting to learn about it and the various other tidbits the author includes. I suppose someone suffering with limerence is the true target audience for this book.
Profile Image for Javierthearcnovice.
245 reviews3 followers
July 3, 2025
First and foremost, I received an arc from NetGalley. Thank you!

Well, I definitely learned something from this book. I had no ideas that limerence was a thing. Simply fascinating! Luckily, that has never happened to me because it sounds kind of creepy and scary. Give it a read and learn for yourself and about yourself.
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