
“This is the story of the greatest love, ever. An outlandish
claim, outrageous perhaps, but trust me..."
And so begins the bestselling novel hailed as a new kind of American
love story with a fresh voice and whimsical
style that critics called “masterful,” “mesmerizing,”
“wonderfully inventive” and “heartwarming.”
J.J. Smith is Keeper of the Records for The Book of Records,
an ordinary man searching for the extraordinary.
J.J. has clocked the world's longest continuous kiss, 30 hours
and 45 minutes. He has verified the lengthiest single unbroken
apple peel, 172 feet 4 inches. He has measured the farthest flight
of a champagne cork from an untreated, unheated bottle, 177 feet
9 inches. He has tasted the world's largest menu item, whole-roasted
Bedouin camel.
But in all his adventures from Australia to Zanzibar, J.J. has
never witnessed great love until he comes
upon a tiny windswept town in the heartland of America, where
folks still talk about family, faith, and crops. Here, where he
least expects it, J.J. discovers a world record attempt like no
other: Piece by piece, a farmer named Wally Chubb is eating a
Boeing 747 to prove his love for a woman.
In this vast landscape of cornfields and lightning storms, J.J.
is doubly astounded to be struck by love for the same woman, Willa
Wyatt of the honey eyes and wild blonde hair. It is a feeling
beyond measure, throwing J.J.'s carefully ordered world upside
down, proving that hearts, like world records, can be broken,
and the greatest wonders in life cannot
be quantified.
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