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Fiction

Like Nora Ephron, With a British Twist

In her second novel, “Good Material,” Dolly Alderton adds her own flair to the classic rom-com.

This book cover shows a drawing of a man sitting on the edge of his bed, putting on a sock. The title and the author's name appear in separate boxes shaded with bright primary colors.

Katie J.M. Baker is a correspondent for The Times who wishes she still lived in London.

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GOOD MATERIAL, by Dolly Alderton


Andy, the 35-year-old struggling comedian who narrates most of Dolly Alderton’s new novel, “Good Material,” has been freshly dumped by his ex, Jen, for mysterious reasons. Like Rob in Nick Hornby’s “High Fidelity,” an obvious inspiration, Andy knows his relationship had its problems. He’s even compiled a list of Jen’s faults, including “lingered too long in museums” where he “once saw her nod respectfully at a TINY JADE SPOON.” It doesn’t soothe his heartbreak; Andy is obsessed with working out what went wrong. In the process, maybe he can get to the bottom of why the rest of his life has derailed, too.

Alderton is a cultural phenomenon in the U.K., but she has yet to reach the same degree of fame in the U.S., even though her coming-of-age memoir, “Everything I Know About Love,” has spent weeks on the New York Times best-seller list and is the basis of the TV series of the same name. “Good Material,” her second novel and the first she’s written from the perspective of a man, delivers the most delightful aspects of classic romantic comedy — snappy dialogue, realistic relationship dynamics, humorous meet-cutes and misunderstandings — and leaves behind the clichéd gender roles and traditional marriage plot.

Andy, described by one character as a shambolic, “overgrown schoolboy,” can’t get his agent to call him back. Too broke to live by himself in London, he’s moved in with a 78-year-old conspiracy theorist who has a parasocial relationship with Julian Assange. His friends won’t meet for impromptu drinks because they have to get up early to take care of their children. And then, of course, there’s Jen, who broke up with him seemingly out of nowhere. For most of the book, we can only guess why as we follow along on Andy’s relatably chaotic and often very funny (to us) rebound journey. He spends some ill-fated time on a houseboat. He dates a Gen Z woman named Sophie with an inscrutable Instagram. He goes on a grim revenge diet. He cyberstalks Jen’s new quasi boyfriend after he runs into them mattress shopping — naturally, he doesn’t stop until he’s uncovered Australian tax returns for the man’s ex-girlfriend’s custom soap business.

In “Good Material,” as in all of her writing, Alderton excels at portraying nonromantic intimate relationships with tenderness and authenticity. Andy struggles to be emotionally vulnerable with his male friends and laments his inability to express his feelings as articulately as the women in his life: They sound like “listening to an orchestra perform” while he hoots along “tunelessly like a grade-one recorder player.” He is often at his best friend’s house, with his wife and kids — if Andy were “feeling ungenerous,” he admits, it would be easy to feel resentful that “there is rarely any effort to suggest a plan other than me slotting into their lives.” But the truth is, he’s desperate for a home of his own, filled with warm laundry and just-cooked lasagna.


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