From the perspective of Alex’s long-term, long-suffering, on-again, off-again girlfriend, Sarah, Poppy’s connection with Alex hangs over her own relationship with him like a constant threat-Chekov’s unresolved sexual tension. The rest is the stuff of legend or infamy, depending on your vantage point. They’re sure they have little in common apart from “the fact that we hate each other’s clothes.” But it takes just one more meeting-a shared ride home to their mutual hometown in Ohio over break-for an enduring mutual fascination, fueled by those same differences, to firmly take hold. Alex quickly sizes Poppy up, reacting to her “neon orange and pink floral jumpsuit from the early seventies” with skepticism and disapproval. He is wearing khakis she wears what look to him like a ridiculous costume. When Alex meets Poppy during the first night of orientation at the University of Chicago, neither one is particularly impressed. Like Ephron and Jane Austen before her, Emily Henry paints a specific and nuanced picture of first impressions gone perfectly wrong in a prelude to a relationship that is nonetheless incredibly right. probably not if they act like these characters do. Emily Henry’s People We Meet on Vacation is an inspired and achingly romantic reimagining of Nora Ephron’s beloved rom-com When Harry Met Sally, which famously questioned whether men and women (heterosexual pairings specifically) can ever truly be just friends.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |