The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

A romcom where two exes meet

All ends well in Emily Henry’s breezy, funny story of loss and love.

- By Chris Hewitt Star Tribune (Minneapoli­s)

We never get romantic comedies in movie theaters anymore, but at least there are places we can find plenty of ‘em: libraries and bookstores.

Emily Henry’s “Funny Story” checks both the “romantic” and “comedy” boxes with its story of children’s librarian Daphne, who moves to a small Michigan town with her fiancé, only to be dumped on the eve of their wedding. She even gets that romcom staple, the “meet cute,” in the form of scrambling to find a roommate, who turns out to be the ex of the woman who Daphne’s fiancé dumped her for.

It’s a variation of the proverbial “the enemy of my enemy is my friend” but, in this case, it’s “the enemy of my fiancé will end up being my fiancé.”

We know Daphne and the roommate, a sommelier named Miles, are perfect for each other immediatel­y. They probably know they’re perfect for each other immediatel­y. But, in true romcom form, it takes almost the length of the book for them to get it together.

I feel like 50 pages could easily be edited out of Henry’s 410 but, that quibble aside, it’s a breeze to read, with nuanced characteri­zations, brisk set pieces and Henry’s deft wit.

There’s this tart descriptio­n by Daphne, who narrates the book, when she meets Miles, who she says looks “like the guy from high school who intentiona­lly failed his senior year to stick around for a while, then started selling bootleg cologne out of the trunk of his car in the mall parking lot.”

She’s being a little hard on handsome, thoughtful Miles, who turns out to be an all-butperfect guy with one issue: He may still be hung up on the ex who dumped him for Daphne’s ex. Henry introduces tons of complicati­ons and most of them are good fun.

Like a lot of romcoms, “Funny Story” insists that romance is rarely tidy or packaged the way we expect it to be. Early on, Daphne tells us that she had “carried my life like a handkerchi­ef knapsack at the end of a broom handle, something small and containabl­e I could pick up and move at the drop of a hat. And I never knew what it was I was running from.”

By the end of “Funny Story,” Daphne has started to figure out her life. It may involve a guy. It may not involve a guy. Who am I kidding? It involves a guy. But it’s also quite a bit more.

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