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Love Story (Love Story series Book 1) Kindle Edition
“Funny, touching and infused with wonder, as all love stories should be.”—San Francisco Examiner
The basis for the 1970 film starring Ryan O'Neal and Ali McGraw, Erich Segal's Love Story is an enduring classic that has captured hearts for almost 50 years.
It is the story of Oliver Barrett IV, a rich jock from a stuffy WASP family on his way to a Harvard degree and a career in law, and Jenny Cavilleri, a wisecracking working-class beauty studying music at Radcliffe.
Oliver and Jenny - kindred spirits from different worlds - meet, talk, question, answer and fall for each other so deeply that no one, themselves included, can understand it. So instead of trying to understand it, they accept it and live it as best they can.
This is their story - a story of two young people and a love so uncompromising it will bring joy to your heat and tears to your eyes. It is the story that told the world, “Love means never having to say you’re sorry.”
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAvon
- Publication dateNovember 1, 2011
- File size263 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
“Not just a story—Love Story is an experience. The reader who responds to this little book will feel less like a reader than an unwritten Segal character, living it all out from the inside … In this ‘love story’ you are not just an observer.” — Christian Science Monitor
“For someone who is in love, or was in love, or hopes to be in love.” — St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“Funny, touching and infused with wonder, as all love stories should be.” — San Francisco Examiner
“It’s incredible...A poignant of novel of nostalgia and romance.” — Washington Post
“This is a tender and revealing and moving book with open language and the irreverence, the humor, the commitment.” — Cleveland Plain Dealer
“It is entertaining, fast paced, witty...but in the end, touching and sincere.” — St. Louis Globe Democrat
“If your emotions still are available to vibrate, here is a story that will shake you up...It is full of humor that sometimes tickles and sometimes stings.” — Associated Press
“The most poignant romance that Journal editors have read in a year’s time.” — Ladies’ Home Journal
“A very simple, immensely appealing love story.” — Publishers Weekly
From the Publisher
"Not just a story--Love Story is an experience. The reader who responds to this little book will feel less like a reader than an unwritten Segal character, living it all out from the inside... In this 'love story' you are not just an observer."--Christian Science Monitor.
"Funny, touching and infused with wonder, as all love stories should be."--San Francisco Examiner
From the Inside Flap
From the Back Cover
About the Author
Erich Segal's first three novels, Love Story, Oliver's Story, and Man, Woman and Child, were all international bestsellers and became major motion pictures. His fourth novel, The Class, was a New York Times bestseller and won literary prizes in both France and Italy. Segal is also the author of Doctors, and most recently, Acts of Faith and Prizes.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Love Story
By Erich SegalBuccaneer Books Inc
Copyright © 1997 Erich SegalAll right reserved.
ISBN: 1568493347
Chapter One
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. Once, when she specifically lumped me with those musical types, I asked her what the order was, and she replied, smiling, ?Alphabetical.? At the time I smiled too. But now I sit and wonder whether she was listing me by my first name -- in which case I would trail Mozart -- or by my last name, in which case I would edge in there between Bach and the Beatles. Either way I don't come first, which for some stupid reason bothers hell out of me, having grown up with the notion that I always had to be number one. Family heritage, don't you know?
In the fall of my senior year, I got into the habit of studying at the Radcliffe library. Not just to eye the cheese, although I admit that I liked to look. The place was quiet, nobody knew me, and the reserve books were less in demand. The day before one of my history hour exams, I still hadn't gotten around to reading the first book on the list, an endemic Harvard disease. I ambled over to the reserve desk to get one of the tomes that would bail me out on the morrow. There were two girls working there. One a tall tennis-anyone type, the other a bespectacled mouse type. I opted for Minnie Four-Eyes.
?Do you have The Waning of the Middle Ages??
She shot a glance up at me.
?Do you have your own library?? she asked.
?Listen, Harvard is allowed to use the Radcliffe library.?
?I'm not talking legality, Preppie, I'm talking ethics. You guys have five million books. We have a few lousy thousand.?
Christ, a superior-being type! The kind who think since the ratio of Radcliffe to Harvard is five to one, the girls must be five times as smart. I normally cut these types to ribbons, but just then I badly needed that goddamn book.
?Listen, I need that goddamn book.?
?Wouldja please watch your profanity, Preppie??
?What makes you so sure I went to prep school??
?You look stupid and rich,? she said, removing her glasses.
?You're wrong,? I protested. ?I'm actually smart and poor.?
?Oh, no, Preppie. I'm smart and poor.?
She was staring straight at me. Her eyes were brown. Okay, maybe I look rich, but I wouldn't let some 'Cliffie -- even one with pretty eyes -- call me dumb.
?What the hell makes you so smart?? I asked.
?I wouldn't go for coffee with you,? she answered.
?Listen -- I wouldn't ask you.?
?That,? she replied, ?is what makes you stupid.?
Let me explain why I took her for coffee. By shrewdly capitulating at the crucial moment -- i.e., by pretending that I suddenly wanted to -- I got my book. And since she couldn't leave until the library closed, I had plenty oftime to absorb some pithy phrases about the shift of royal dependence from cleric to lawyer in the late eleventh century. I got an A minus on the exam, coincidentally the same grade I assigned to Jenny's legs when she first walked from behind that desk. I can't say I gave her costume an honor grade, however; it was a bit too Boho for my taste. I especially loathed that Indian thing she carried for a handbag. Fortunately I didn't mention this, as I later discovered it was of her own design.
We went to the Midget Restaurant, a nearby sandwich joint which, despite its name, is not restricted to people of small stature. I ordered two coffees and a brownie with ice cream (for her).
?I'm Jennifer Cavilleri,? she said, ?an American of Italian descent.?
As if I wouldn't have known. ?And a music major,? she added.
?My name is Oliver,? I said.
?First or last?? she asked.
?First,? I answered, and then confessed that my entire name was Oliver Barrett. (I mean, that's most of it.)
?Oh,? she said. ?Barrett, like the poet??
?Yes,? I said. ?No relation.?
In the pause that ensued, I gave inward thanks that she hadn't come up with the usual distressing question: ?Barrett, like the hall?? For it is my special albatross to be related to the guy that built Barrett Hall, the largest and ugliest structure in Harvard Yard, a colossal monument to my family's money, vanity and flagrant Harvardism.
After that, she was pretty quiet. Could we have run out of conversation so quickly? Had I turned her off by not being related to the poet? What? She simply sat there, semi-smiling at me. For something to do, I checked out her notebooks. Her handwriting was curious -- small sharp little letters with no capitals (who did she think she was, e. e. cummings?). And she was taking some pretty snowy courses: Comp.Lit. 105, Music 150, Music 201 --
?Music 201? Isn't that a graduate course??
She nodded yes, and was not very good at masking her pride.
?Renaissance polyphony.?
?What's polyphony??
?Nothing sexual, Preppie.?
Why was I putting up with this? Doesn't she read the Crimson? Doesn't she know who I am?
?Hey, don't you know who I am??
?Yeah,? she answered with kind of disdain. ?You're the guy that owns Barrett Hall.?
She didn't know who I was.
?I don't own Barrett Hall,? I quibbled. ?My great-grandfather happened to give it to Harvard.?
?So his not-so-great grandson would be sure to get in!?
That was the limit.
?Jenny, if you're so convinced I'm a loser, why did you bulldoze me into buying you coffee??
She looked me straight in the eye and smiled.
?I like your body,? she said.
Part of being a big winner is the ability...
Continues...
Excerpted from Love Storyby Erich Segal Copyright © 1997 by Erich Segal. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.
Product details
- ASIN : B005UCVVA6
- Publisher : Avon (November 1, 2011)
- Publication date : November 1, 2011
- Language : English
- File size : 263 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 100 pages
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

My father became world famous - beloved by the reading public, pilloried by an envious academic community who believed that professors ought not to venture into popular culture. And I missed it all. But I know his novels, and I was lucky enough to know their extraordinary author. My father was such a gentle man, and as a result he wrote innocent, tender novels. They have his heart and soul and honesty and humour, and that combination, rarer than it should be, is alchemical.
He was 30 when he sat down, one frigid, snow-silenced winter break in Cambridge, Massachusettes, to write Love Story. He was a young dynamic professor of Classics and Comparative Literature at Yale and he had just learned a former student of his from Harvard had lost his wife to cancer at twenty-five. My father, a few years older and still grieving the death of his own father, was consumed by the story.
It is no coincidence that my father was a Classicist - the arc of his story is as old as time, and ever relevant. It's true of all his novels. Each takes on a broad, serious subject - religion, family, infidelity, medicine. science - but more than anything else they are very human stories; fast-paced, engaging plots about warm and vivid charatcters, real people we can root for.
My father adored even the ancient roots of popular entertainment, and unlike many others in his field, understood that to move the broader public, to speak to the hearts of the people, requires an understanding of and a care for the everyman. It is to the everyman, in real life, that tragedy happens, and above all, love.
By Francesca Segal
http://www.erichsegal.com/
https://www.francescasegal.com/
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this book to be a timeless classic with a beautiful emotional journey that makes a better movie adaptation. The prose is easy to read and beautifully written, with relatable characters and a touching narrative. Customers appreciate its wit and humor, and one customer notes that it holds up well after 50 years.
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Customers describe this book as a masterpiece and a beautiful emotional trip, with one customer noting how it addresses love and sacrifice, while another mentions how it serves as a sweet introduction to the real nature of love.
"...The story moves through defined chapters and takes us through their courtship, marriage, Oliver's Law School, working summers in Massachusetts shore..." Read more
"I reread this classic love story that begins, "What can you say about a twenty-five-year-old-girl who died?"..." Read more
"...A perfect modern tragedy and that makes a best-seller that reads still fresh many decades after its first appearance...." Read more
"I never forgot this book first love story I ever read and it made me so emotional...." Read more
Customers find the book easy to read and well written, appreciating that it's a quick read.
"...The book is in part heavy on dialogue and sparse on descriptive text...." Read more
"...has this “crispy” quality that makes it very lucid, elegant and easy to read...." Read more
"...I was sad when I finished this book. Didn’t want it to end. Great, quick read!" Read more
"...Kinda took the joy out of reading the book; especially one so beautifully written!..." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, finding them relatable, with one customer noting how the two lovers are constructed simply yet elegantly.
"...The characters idiosyncrasy and upbringing plus the story development and structure make a touching and fascinating book." Read more
"...the two characters in the novella are surprisingly memorable for each of them has a very strong or headstrong..." Read more
"...the movie before the book, but with this one the main characters are so much more palpable that one finds it easier to connect with them." Read more
"...The characters appear sweet beyond belief: it is almost as if after the book, no one can remain as naive or innocent having simply read the book and..." Read more
Customers find the book touching, with one customer noting its strong attraction and another describing it as never failing to touch their heart.
"...Oliver attends Harvard. When they meet their attraction is strong and mutual (p. 2). Their friendship develops and they fall in love...." Read more
"...Humorous. Wise-cracking. Witty. Touching. Thoughtful. And sorrowful...." Read more
"...say you're sorry" is the classic quote that I remember and is still poignant and relevant today...." Read more
"Simple yet touching. No gimmicks just a beautiful love story...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's sturdiness, with one customer noting it holds up well after 50 years, while others mention it arrives in great condition.
"...This little novella, I found out, has this “crispy” quality that makes it very lucid, elegant and easy to read...." Read more
"...The condition was great it was a nice hardback which I wasn't expecting but I really enjoyed. Overall fantastic quality, definitely worth it." Read more
"Such an amazing book and it was in pretty good condition" Read more
"Holds up after 50 years..." Read more
Customers find the book witty and humorous, with one customer particularly appreciating the engaging dialogue between characters.
"...I like the wit in their flirting. It's that age old tale of boy meets girl, they experience conflict, and then they fall in love...." Read more
"...Humorous. Wise-cracking. Witty. Touching. Thoughtful. And sorrowful...." Read more
"...I always enjoy the dialogue in the novel vs. the movie - although similar the novel is just better...." Read more
"Better than most best sellers , moving touching, funny at times, and yes so human no one could have done better than Erich segal have read the book..." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's timelessness, describing it as a timeless classic, with one customer noting its surprisingly modern elements.
"I love all things retro and vintage. But one things that stands the test of time is love. I was sad when I finished this book. Didn’t want it to end...." Read more
"This is a great old fashioned, yet surprisingly modern, love story (No puns intended.) I remember seeing the movie way back back when...." Read more
"I do love it. Timeless. Witty- wonderful. It's a quick read. You won't be able to put it down. And you shouldn't...." Read more
"The cream of the crop of love stories - a timeless classic..." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on August 12, 2012I read Love Story (Segal, 1970) the first time after watching the movie in the summer of 1970. I have read this book various times throughout my lifetime. The story has been called a modern version of Romeo and Juliet, but it goes deeper than that. The plot of the story addresses social differences in the American society, family pressure, and expectations. The characters are very unconventional and the story structure is not traditional. These characteristics make the story interesting and touching.
The characters and the plot interweave. The characters come from opposite ends of the social spectrum. Oliver Barrett IV comes from high society and from a very wealthy family whose members are Harvard alumnae. The family even donated the Barrett Hall to the University. Jennifer Cavilleri comes from a collar worker family; her father owes a small bakery. Oliver's family is from Ipswich, Massachusetts and Jennifer's family is from Cranston, Rhode Island. Jennifer attends Radcliff College under a scholarship. Oliver attends Harvard. When they meet their attraction is strong and mutual (p. 2). Their friendship develops and they fall in love. Oliver's family is very competitive and expects him to go to Law School, take over the family business, and marry someone in their same social level. His father is a banker, landlord, and business owner. Jennifer's father just wants his daughter to be happy. He does not pressure his daughter at all. She has no mother since she died when Jennifer was a child. Their social gap becomes evident when they visit each other's home. Oliver's parents are cold toward their own son and they treat Jennifer cordial but cold. Jennifer's father is a down-to-earth niece guy. Oliver's home is a huge state. Jennifer's home is a humble working class adobe in a row of street houses, with no extra land. Their difference in social status could not be any larger. Their love is stronger than Oliver's parents' prejudice. Jennifer receives a scholarship to study music in Paris, France and Oliver proposes. They marry. Oliver is disinherited by his father for marrying Jennifer and by doing so, defying his father.
It is interesting how the first sentence of the book opens with the climax of the story, in the form of a question: What can you say about a twenty-five-year-old-girl who died?" (p. 1). Even though the climax is given out on the first sentence of the book, a complete unconventional approach to traditional story structure, this "preview" that might have been considered a spoiler made the reader's curiosity grow. The readers want to find out how and why this young life extinguishes. The whole story is a flashback that takes us to the day these two young lovers meet in Radcliff College Library. The story moves through defined chapters and takes us through their courtship, marriage, Oliver's Law School, working summers in Massachusetts shore, Oliver's graduation from Law School, Oliver's law firm job, and their big move to New York City. Toward the end of the story Jennifer is diagnosed with leukemia and that is the reason why she can't conceive. Oliver is devastated and ridden with guilt. Oliver buys airline tickets for Paris, but Jennifer states that is not the way they are going to approach her disease and her final days.
This book was a success by the way the plot addressed social issues that were not openly discussed and were not well known by the general public, unless the reader belonged to the high class society. The story addresses love and sacrifice. It also shows how family expectations and demands are prioritized over parents love and support for their child. The characters idiosyncrasy and upbringing plus the story development and structure make a touching and fascinating book.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 24, 2022I reread this classic love story that begins, "What can you say about a twenty-five-year-old-girl who died?" for the first time since I was a kid when when I wore out the paperback by reading it repeatedly. It's a short novel; a fast but powerful read. Oliver Barrett IV, a star hockey player/law student, descends from a line of high achieving old money Harvard alumni, and is struggling to define himself away from the constraints of his judgmental, micromanaging father. Jennifer Cavilleri, who attends Radcliffe on a music scholarship, is the only child of a loving father, a widower who owns a small bakery in Rhode Island. She calls her father Phil. These two, Jennifer and Oliver, (nicknamed Preppie by Jennifer), couldn't be more different. The book is in part heavy on dialogue and sparse on descriptive text. Erich Segal makes brilliant use of the verbal volleyball between the two main characters. I like the wit in their flirting. It's that age old tale of boy meets girl, they experience conflict, and then they fall in love. This story turns tragic when Jennifer is diagnosed with leukemia. That part of the story seems to have some logical problems with the doctor not telling her of her diagnosis at first, and then very quickly it seems she's dying. Segal does his best work showing how this couple from such dissparate social and emotional backgrounds come together in love. He also shows what a profound impact these two had on each other and their respective families in the limited years they were together. This book struck a chord with me as a kid because my father died young. Also, the relationships feel absolutely authentic to me. Love Story is a masterpiece.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 15, 2024I bought the hardcover book and saw the movie in 1970. I was 29 years old.
After reading this slim volume, which was indeed a tearjerker, I thought the line “love means not ever having to say you’re sorry, sounded like something you would put on a movie poster.
I had been married for a short while in my early 20s and I thought well if you love someone and you hurt them or you do something wrong you apologize which happened in that particular marriage. That was not why I got divorce.
I remarried just about the time love story was published and was very much in love with my husband who for 53 years could never say he was sorry for anything nor would he ever discuss anything that was wrong
My second husband is dead, fortunately, and my little take on this books premise is if you love someone you better better learn to say you’re sorry.
I bought this book on Valentine’s Day 54 years after buying it for the first time, wondering whether my reaction would be the same… And it is.
Blindly dictated to an extremely dyslexic tablet
- Reviewed in the United States on March 18, 2025Not the first time I've read it. Probably not the last either. Such a wonderful, well-written story about real love. Everyone should read it at least once. And if you can, watch the movie. Enough said...I'm on to Oliver's Story.
Top reviews from other countries
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Carine IrmaReviewed in France on January 18, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars L’histoire d’amour universelle
Une éternité que je souhaitais relire ce roman. De longs mois à repousser cette lecture pour éviter l’excès d’émotions ……
Une expérience fascinante que de retrouver les mêmes mots, le même récit, alors que je ne suis plus là même personne que lorsque j’ai lu ce roman pour la première fois.
L’histoire connue de Oliver , sportif, riche et de Jenny , musicienne, venant d’un milieu beaucoup plus modeste .
Alors que tout les oppose, y compris la religion, le destin a pourtant décidé de les réunir .
Une rencontre hors du temps , celle de l’amour universel, inconditionnel.
Une histoire d’Amour narrée en toute simplicité , sans détails, sans détour .
On s’attache trop vite à ce jeune homme bien éduqué et cette jeune fille à la réplique facile mais drôle .
Mais les désordres de l’univers s’en mêlent …. Après le beau temps , vient non pas l’orage mais le tsunami .. la maladie s’installe … la fin on la connaît tous , ce qui n’a pourtant pas empêcher mes larmes de couler .
- Amazon CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 26, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Lovely, tender romance
As it’s the 50th anniversary I thought I’d like to read this. It’s quite a short book so didn’t take long to read but it was beautifully written and unlike some modern authors who pad the story out to make the book much longer, this was more condensed but really painted the story well. Lovely book.
- leigh anne headReviewed in Canada on June 16, 2022
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful
A classic,I really enjoyed this book
- ViOReviewed in Germany on March 23, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars I love it
This book is the only book that I have read more than once, and it makes me giggle and sob uncontrollably every time. This book is so purely and so beautifully written. It is a masterpiece. I think everybody needs to have read it at least once in their lifetime.
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rolandoReviewed in Italy on November 11, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Meraviglioso
Libro iconico, il titolo parla da sé, arrivato in condizioni perfette