Love Story By Erich Segal Page
In 1970, a slim novel wrapped in a stark white and red cover landed on bookshelves with a quiet dedication: “To my parents, who taught me love.” No one expected a cultural firestorm. Yet Erich Segal’s Love Story became a phenomenon, topping bestseller lists for over a year, spawning an Oscar-winning film, and embedding phrases like “Love means never having to say you’re sorry” into the global lexicon.
It’s not a perfect novel. The pacing is breathless, the secondary characters are cardboard, and the plot is a classic “rich boy/poor girl” setup. But its emotional honesty remains unassailable. Pick it up for the cultural literacy; stay for the unexpected punch of a young woman telling a Harvard legacy that his money doesn’t make him interesting. love story by erich segal
They marry against Oliver’s family’s wishes, cutting off his money. The couple scrapes by as Oliver finishes law school. Just as life turns a corner—financial stability, a promising career—Jenny falls gravely ill. The novel’s second half accelerates into a devastating, unsentimental race against time. The famous last line, delivered by Oliver after Jenny’s death, is less a platitude than a raw howl of grief. Critics at the time dismissed Love Story as melodrama. But Segal, a Yale classics professor turned screenwriter, was smarter than that. He stripped romance of Victorian pretension. There are no heaving bosoms or purple prose. The dialogue is crisp, witty, and modern—filled with verbal sparring and four-letter words. Jenny calls Oliver “preppy,” and he calls her a “stuck-up Radcliffe bitch.” In 1970, a slim novel wrapped in a