![]() Fans of Sarah Dessen will enjoy this enchanting novel of family quandaries and love at first sight. The teens are realistic and empathetic characters, and their story unfolds effortlessly, quickly capturing readers' interest. When a 17 year old girl, named Hadley, misses her scheduled flight from JFK to London, on her rescheduled flight, she meets a British boy, named Oliver, who happens to be in her row on the airplane. Inside The New York Times Book Review began in 2006, and its entire. Summaries A teenage girl misses her flight at JFK Airport and meets a young British guy who may turn out to be her true love. ![]() Her story is told in flashbacks as she flirts with Oliver, talking to him about things she's never revealed to anyone else. author of Windfall and The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight. Hadley hasn't seen her father since her parents' divorce and is dreading this trip. The answer to the question of what the statistical probability of love, at first sight, becomes by definition is arrived at through a calculation involving the characters. This novel has a simple premise, but it is packed with detail, emotion, and likable characters. The book's title carries an implicit question that leads to the natural expectation of an answer. ![]() And when they arrive in London, both dreading their destinations, she isn't ready to let go of what has developed between them. She would never have met Oliver and sat next to him on the long flight to Heathrow, talking quietly in the darkened plane. ![]() She wouldn't have been stuck at JFK waiting for the next flight. "Who would have guessed that four minutes could change everything?" If she'd been four minutes earlier, 17-year-old Hadley would have made her flight to London for her father's wedding. ![]()
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