In Stein’s debut romance, a preschool teacher revisits her past when her former boyfriend writes a movie based on their breakup.
When she was a freshman in college in the 2000s, Callie Dressler met and fell in love with Ethan Randel, a classic-film buff. They planned to move to San Francisco after graduation, but she ended the relationship before that happened. Ten years later, Callie works as an educator and lives in her childhood home in small-town New Jersey. Her relationship with Ethan is a distant memory until she learns that he wrote a screenplay for a film called Rerouting and that it chronicles a breakup that’s very similar to theirs. The film’s release coincides with a major upheaval in her life: Her pregnant sister Nina, brother-in-law Michael, and niece Zoe move in with her as their own house is being renovated. As Callie juggles competing demands of work and family, she wonders if the release of Rerouting signals something important about her history with Ethan. As her past and present collide, a flirtation with a dashing architect named Ben Perlow prompts her to consider whether it’s time to write her own Hollywood ending. Stein’s novel presents a charming tale of first love and second chances that’s likely to entertain fans of the works of Emily Giffin. The narrative seamlessly moves between Callie’s college years and her present life as a preschool teacher. Overall, she’s a likable protagonist whose reevaluation of her relationship with Ethan is thoughtful and nuanced. Although Ethan is primarily featured in flashback chapters, he’s a strong supporting character whose journey as a screenwriter mirrors Callie’s voyage of self-discovery. Callie’s developing relationship with Ben brings an additional spark to the story, and their quirky dialogue is fit for a rom-com like Sleepless in Seattle—a film that the characters specifically reference: “as an architect, I can certainly appreciate Tom Hanks’s pain in that movie,” notes Ben.
A heartwarming modern romance for movie mavens.