I Think I Love You

I Think I Love You

by Allison Pearson (Author)

Synopsis

Deliciously clever and touching, with a compelling twist, I THINK I LOVE YOU asks what happens when the man you thought you loved turns out to be somebody else...In her bestselling debut, I Don't Know How She Does It, Allison Pearson spoke to mothers everywhere. Now, in I Think I Love You, she is back with her pitch-perfect ability to observe our lives, loves and relationships. We enter the world of two unforgettable friends: Petra and Sharon, in 1970s South Wales, who live for David Cassidy. His fan magazine is the girls' Bible and they memorise every word that he sings and writes, in the hope of becoming the future Mrs Cassidy. But unbeknownst to Petra, and to millions of other hopefuls, David's letters may not be all his own work. The secret lies with Bill Finn, English graduate turned reluctant pop journalist, whose job it is to compile the Ultimate David Cassidy Quiz. Top prize: the trip of a lifetime, to meet your one and only love. Over two decades later, bruised by grief, Petra is living with her thirteen-year-old daughter, who has her own teen crush. By sheer chance - unless you believe in destiny - Petra discovers that the questions which obsessed her back in 1974 are suddenly very much alive. And Bill, successful in business but never in love, has some confessions of his own...I Think I Love You is a classic story of friendship across the decades. A romantic comedy with a broken heart, it is Allison Pearson at her humane and captivating best.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 368
Publisher: Chatto and Windus
Published: 24 Jun 2010

ISBN 10: 0701176970
ISBN 13: 9780701176976
Book Overview: From the Number One bestselling author of I DON'T KNOW HOW SHE DOES IT: a wildly witty, beautifully written and deeply poignant story of a girl whose teenage dreams of meeting her pin-up come true in later life...

Media Reviews
A delightful, giddy novel. . . . [Pearson] finds those universal chords, the stuff of great novels. -- Los Angeles Times What I Don't Know How She Does It did for working mothers, I Think I Love You does for every woman who's gone through life with an idealized notion of love. . . . An entertaining, thoughtful story that women of any age can relate to. -- The Oregonian It was impossible not to be captivated by this romantic comedy. -- Chicago Tribune Pearson writes with such humor and affection for her characters. . . . Combines effervescence with earnestness, a finely tuned sense of absurdity with nostalgia, satiric wit with genuine warmth. -- The New York Times Anyone who ever swooned over the pages of Teen Beat will delight in the premise of I Think I Love You. . . . Offers comedic relief of the highest order. -- The Minneapolis Star-Tribune [A] funny, tender novel about first love--and whether we ever really grow out of it. -- O, The Oprah Magazine Pearson renders teenagedom with authenticity and poignancy. . . . Lovely. -- The Washington Post An absolute hoot. . . . Another gem. -- Newsweek I Think I Love You will have special resonance for baby boomers who experienced the early 1970s as young teens. . . . But Pearson's empathetic portrait of Petra transcends the era, as does Petra's tender recollection of her first, unobtainable love. -- The Wall Street Journal Pearson grabs 1970s nostalgia by its weepy, pop-culture heartstrings in I Think I Love You, an homage to teen crushes. . . . Sweetly told. -- USA Today [Petra] is the beating heart of the story, quick with nostalgic references and the bewitching, heartbroken thrills that come close to the urgency of first love. -- The Daily Beast Capture[s] the heady intensity of a teenage crush. . . . If you were a David Cassidy fan yourself, you may find that t
Author Bio
Allison Pearson is an award-winning journalist who has written for the Daily Telegraph and the Evening Standard, and now has a weekly column in the Daily Mail. Her first novel, I Don't Know How She Does It, was a success all over the world, and is currently being filmed. She lives in Cambridge with the New Yorker writer Anthony Lane and their two children.