The first time I heard the synopsis of Jennifer E. Smith’s
latest novel, This is What Happy Looks
Like (April 2, 2013), I thought, how cute. Teenage movie star, Graham
Larkin sends Ellie O’Neill, a small town girl who lives in Maine, an email about
walking his pet pig, Wilbur, by accident and soon, they find that they cannot
stop emailing each other. Ellie mentions by chance that there’s nothing to do
in small-town Maine and Graham finds that her hometown is the perfect place for
his latest movie.

Graham Larkin shows up in Ellie’s town, much to her surprise
and he’s looking for Ellie. However, can she, a small town girl have a
relationship with someone as famous as Graham Larkin, especially when she has
secrets of her own to hide?
I read This is What
Happy Looks Like with a smile on my face. It’s cute, filled with cute lines
such as “I’m also terrible at saying goodbyes” and “Okay, then, I’ll just say
hello again twice”. It’s a very happy cute book that made me look really
strange. I was reading it in school, with a weird grin that seemed to be stuck
on my face.
However, there lies the problem. No doubt, This is What Happy Looks Like is a good
story about teenage love that’s rather adorable, but that’s it. It’s rather
superficial and rather “happy”. Even when the main character was sad and
depressed, I couldn’t get into her head. It wasn’t like the writing was
particularly bad or anything like that but This
is What Happy Looks Like is a very “feel-good” novel with nothing lasting.
Sure, the story was rather cute and it’s a story that I’d probably read when
I’m looking for a quick read.
In the end, This Is What
Happy Looks Like is a quick read. It’s a satisfying quick read, but nothing
more. It keeps in style with Smith’s previous novel, The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight, with its
cuteness (I would argue that This Is What
Happy Looks Like is cuter), but whereas The
Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight had a quite a huge chunk of
internalization by the main character, Hadley, over her parent’s divorce and
her father’s subsequent remarriage, This
Is What Happy Looks Like has offers a tiny view into Ellie’s mind. It
teases the reader with some, leaves off, letting the reader smile at the
cuteness of Ellie and Graham and returns later at the end for another glimpse.
No doubt about it, Jennifer E. Smith knows what teenage
girls want to read about. This Is What
Happy Looks Like is a book I’d turn to for a satisfying two-hour read,
something that would make me happy. It’s not something I’d read if I needed
something thought-provoking but sometimes, that’s okay too.


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