For Your Entertainment // BUYER’S PICKS
Emily Henry
DEVYN GLISTA / ST. BLANC STUDIOS
Comedy of the heart
Emily Henry has found her new happy place in romance
by JUDI KETTELER
When No. 1 New York Times bestselling author Emily Henry sat down to write Happy Place, she thought it might be an over-the-top screwball comedic romance. She had been watching comedies of remarriage from the 1940s, like The Philadelphia Story, Bringing Up Baby and The Lady Eve—movies where the whole conceit was to get a couple back together. Henry thought she’d bring that fun, slapstick energy to her own plot about two characters falling back in love.
But as she wrote, it became less comical and more heartwarming—tinged with heartbreak. “I thought about what might happen to pull two people apart,” she tells the Connection from her home in Cincinnati, Ohio. “How do they meaningfully break up, and then how do you make it possible for them to get back together so it’s not a toxic decision?”
While each draft of Happy Place relied less on belly laughs and more on heartstrings, Henry—a master of quippy, sexy banter—retained plenty of levity. With her perfectly timed sarcasm and easy comebacks, her fast-paced dialogue has been compared to Gilmore Girls, a coming-of-age television series from the 2000s. It’s the ultimate compliment, she says. “I am [in] that subset of millennials [who are] exactly the right age to have been raised by Gilmore Girls.”
Happy Place centres on the relationship of Harriet and Wyn, who have been together for eight years and are engaged. Only, they’ve broken up months before, but their close-knit group of friends doesn’t know it. When they wind up (accidentally) going on vacation together to the group’s usual summer spot in Maine, the plot thickens. Henry overlaps past with present, winding through years of Harriet and Wyn’s history as the week in Maine progresses and the tension builds.
While Harriet and Wyn’s story drives the action, it’s an ensemble cast, featuring Kimmy and Cleo (who fell in love and run a farm) and Sabrina and Parth (who are getting married). Henry really wanted to explore the dynamics among a group of friends in their early 30s. “In your 20s, you’re mostly in the same stage of life with your friends and have a lot of common ground,” she says. But once people reach their 30s, lives can start to diverge, with friends getting married or divorced, having kids or changing careers. She sees it in her own life: “I’m in this stage of life where my friends and I have different things going on.”
Out of college, Henry wrote young adult fiction and published four novels. “I wanted to write the kinds of books that I was loving as a reader,” she says. Plus, in her early 20s, she says, she wouldn’t have been able to write meaningfully about older characters. She fell into writing adult fiction–romance almost by accident. To get over a bout of writer’s block, she decided to just start writing a character who had writer’s block. It turned into Beach Read and secured her a new base of readers. She’s found a home in romance, a genre she absolutely loves as a reader (her favourites right now are novelists Kennedy Ryan, Talia Hibbert and Sonali Dev). “I am perfectly content to wake up every day and just write,” she says.
Judi Ketteler (judiketteler.com) is an award-winning essayist and has written three non-fiction books.
Happy place
Ever since Harriet and Wyn became an item in college, people have considered them the perfect couple. Except they’re not. The two broke up nearly half a year ago, without telling their best friends.
Now they and two couples are at a cottage in Maine where they’ve gone every summer for a decade. Harriet and Wyn can’t bear to let their friends down with their personal news, so they opt to fake it for the week. How hard can that be?
Happy Place (Item 1011482) will be available in May in most Costco warehouses.—Cindy Redmond, Buyer, Books
True Love Experiment (Item 1447886) will be available in May in most Costco warehouses.
Additional Book Pick
True Love Experiment by Christina Lauren
The writing duo known as Christina Lauren is back with their latest romance: True Love Experiment. The two plucked romance writer Felicity “Fizzy” Chen, a fan-favourite character from their novel The Soulmate Equation, and have her working with Connor, a documentary filmmaker who wants to make a television show about the writer’s search for true love. But will the romantic sparks be flying on- or off-screen?
Costco Connection
What sparked the idea for this book?
Christina Lauren Fizzy is such a big character: She’s loud and seems to have her life (reasonably) in order. She’s a romance writer, and while we used bits of that in Soulmate for comedic purposes, we didn’t want it to be a punchline, and we didn’t want to poke fun at a genre that gets too much of that already. So what were her vulnerabilities? What was her story? And then it hit us: Fizzy had lost her joy. Once we had that part, the story unfolded from there.
CC
What would you like readers to know about this book?
CL We think this is our best book yet—which is an awesome thing to be able to say after 29 books. It’s hilarious and deeply romantic, and while we are very different romance writers than Fizzy, we share the same fangirl heart. Read what makes you happy! Listen to the music that speaks to your soul! Celebrate the things that bring you joy and never apologize for it.
Also in the warehouse
Picture books are made all the better when the words and images work together to impart a gentle lesson.
In Weather Together by Jessie Sima, Nimbus learns how to endure her cloudy moods with help from a friend. In Noodle and the No Bones Day by Jonathan Graziano and Dan Tavis, an elderly pug, Noodle, learns that some days you just need to be especially kind to yourself. Both books (Item 1714935) will be available in May in most Costco warehouses.—CR