cover image The Love Proof

The Love Proof

Madeleine Henry. Atria, $17 trade paper (288p) ISBN 978-1-982142-96-4

In Henry’s tender if familiar second novel (after Breathe In, Cash Out), a Yale physics prodigy attempts a scientific proof to explain her romantic feelings. Sophie Jones (dubbed “The Next Einstein” in a New York Times profile) is about to embark on a research project on the nature of time during her first year at Yale when she falls in love with fellow student Jake Kristopher. As the couple’s lives become more entwined, Sophie becomes filled with a “debilitating peace” and loses interest in her studies, leading those around her—including Jake—to fear the loss of her potential. After graduation, Jake proposes they push pause on the relationship, so Sophie can focus on her work. She flails for a year, but eventually returns to Yale to work on her PhD, determined to work on block theory (the idea that “all events in the past, present, and future existed at once”) to explain her enduring affection for Jake. Though the novel treads well-worn ground in its juxtaposition of science and emotion (“The least understood, most important thing in the world is love,” Sophie declares), Sophie and Jake’s relationship is genuinely endearing. This engaging take on the mysteries of the heart and universe might not have all the answers, but it makes the grade. Agent: Eve Atterman, WME. (Feb.)