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Quote by Jennifer E. Smith

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Field Notes on Love

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Author

Jennifer E. Smith
Jennifer E. Smith

Jennifer E. Smith is a highly acclaimed American author best known for her captivating young adult (YA) fiction. While specific details regarding her exact date of birth remain limited in available public records, her significant impact on contemporary literature is undeniable. Before embarking on her successful writing career, Smith worked as an editor, which deeply influenced her narrative precision. She is celebrated for her ability to weave heartwarming romances with philosophical reflections on fate, chance, and human connection. Her most notable works include The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight, This Is What Happy Looks Like, and Windfall. These novels have resonated with a global audience, translated into over thirty languages, and frequently optioned for film adaptations. Residing in New York City, Smith continues to be a defining voice in modern YA literature, enchanting readers with her witty, tender, and emotionally resonant storytelling. more

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“It's worth getting out of bed some mornings. And it's a pleasure, especially if the pale winter sun is out and shining, to delight with your lover in the urban gift of your favorite café. Fresh coffee, steaming croissants, and the Sunday papers. Ah! All the way to ours, Alice and I talked about love and how many people don't get any while others get a lot, and how that unfairness probably accounts for the federal deficit and crooked contracting practices, and so on.”

“You are going to have to take the rest of these croissants to work with you, I cannot be trusted alone in the house with a half-dozen buttery, crispy pillows of deliciousness." "Well, I wouldn't have brought so many, but that place will only sell them if you buy eight or more." I laugh. A Logan Square conundrum. "I know. One of the neighborhood quirks." "You hipsters with your crazy convolutions." I laugh. The transitional predominantly Latino neighborhood I moved into almost fifteen years ago has indeed become hipster central. Full of young men in skinny jeans and ironic T-shirts and scraggly facial hair, and young women in cotton sundresses with motorcycle boots, all blithely riding about on their vintage Schwinns with earbuds in, making motorists stabby.”

“I started to crawl off; then I remembered my leftover pizza, and I peeled off the salami, pepperoni, and anchovies and placed them on the CD tray (whicn no one used these days with flash drives around)on Boone's computer. I hit the close button and watched the smelly part of my delicious dinner slide away. Boone would have a great time wondering 'where's that smell coming from?”