Factual tidbits:
This novel was published in 1970. It was an immediate sensation, ultimately selling more than twenty-one million copies in thirty-three languages. The phrase "Love means never having to say you're sorry" has since become proverbial and is now listed in numerous books of quotations, including the canonical Bartlett's.

The year it was published, President Nixon told a press conference that, although he liked the book, he objected to some of the vulgar language (this was before the Watergate tapes). Twenty years later, comedian Billy Crystal chose it as a Christmas present for President Bush. Officially banned in the Soviet Union as "decadent" and "counter-revolutionary." and a pirated edition of Love Story even appeared in China (for circulation among member of the Party).


Personal Stuff:

One of the few classics that I can point to someone or something and say This is where I learned about it, this is why I read it: Skimming and old copy of Readers' Digest, they had a little quiz, "Recognize these lines", first lines of classic novels. I didn't recognize the line, but I had it stuck in my head for the next few days, until I went to the library and found the book:

What can you say about a twenty-five year old girl who died? That she was beautiful. And brilliant. That she loved Mozart and Bach. And the Beatles, and me.

What can you say about a book, any book, other than it touched you, you cried, it meant something? It didn't necessarily mean more than any other book, but it drew me through the emotions much smoother than, say, Norma Klein's Sunshine did, and I cried through the movie too, it has the same seamlessness.

Oliver Barrett IV is the last in a line of Olivers, ashamed by his lineage, the money behind it, and the little roman numerals after his name. He has a very hard time communicating with his father, unsure of his love, but sure of expectations. In college, he meets Jenny Cavilleri, a poor girl of Italian descent, smart, perky, alive.

The two fall in love, get married with his father's disapproval, although the lack of reconciliation is mostly Ollie's doing. They set up house alone, Oliver tries to find a job on his own merits as opposed to his name. Jenny teaches. They contemplate parenthood, and when meeting slight adversity to conception, discover that Jenny has a leukemia and not much longer to live.

The novel glances at issues like social/economic status, young people maturing together, independence, and fillial duties versus love. And pain, the pain of fighting for something and learning and living, loving, and then losing it.


Amusing Postscript:

I find the following hilarious. I just did a search on Google just to see what I'd come up with - this is by far the funniest book review I have ever read:

I think it's some sort of classic, a love story with a boy Oliver Barrett loving a girl Jenny Cavilleri who dies. Don't worry, I read more than just love stories.
www.al-shia.com/html/eng/books/list_khati/engl0020.htm