Emmy Everett is reluctantly heading home to New York for her brother Josh's wedding. She has spent the last three years in a fishing town in Rhode Island and, having little to show for it, she doesn't particularly want to answer the questions she is sure to face about her (ex)-fiance, her (questionable) career choices, her (unknown) future. But she is still shocked when her typically resolute brother Josh confesses he is having doubts about his imminent marriage - and he asks Emmy the hardest question of all: what do I do now?
With seventy-two hours until the wedding, Emmy embarks with Josh on a road trip to help him find a mystery woman, and to answer some long overdue questions about who he wants to spend his life with. It isn't only Josh who has some lessons to learn. Along the way, Emmy discovers some undeniable truths about what she wants from her own life; and she begins to realize that perhaps her own happy ending is not as far away as it seems.
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Watch Laura Dave, @nytimes bestselling author, on @CBSMornings talking about the TV adaptation of her latest book, and the novel that started it all: LONDON IS THE BEST CITY IN AMERICA 👀👇🏼 https://t.co/GLdDxbDBnC
Find me on Threads as RufusinLC. Former actress who is presently greatly enjoying the roles of lawyer, professor, writer, mentor, friend and singer.
Pretty good beach read, with a little RI flavor. #WellReadWomen Check out this book: "London Is the Best City in America: A Novel" by Laura Dave https://t.co/oTo5Dd2CC9 https://t.co/cNOv8gCNUe
Bestselling author of 9 novels, TAKE TWO, BIRDIE MAXWELL coming March 2024: https://t.co/9AXwmfOdw1 Mostly on Threads now, tbh.
TOMORROW! Before I even get to the book, let me tell you a little bit about one of my closest friends and first readers, Laura Dave. Fifteen years ago, I read and loved a debut novel called LONDON IS THE BEST CITY IN AMERICA, and when I got to the end… https://t.co/x03idkQCxL
Incredibly deft, utterly satisfying, a triumph of a first novel. (Melissa Bank)
Such a satisfying read . . . The relationships among her cast are complicated, fraught and tender. Her story reads sweet but real. (The Washington Post)
Impossible to put down . . . lyrical, witty and honest. (Jane Magazine)