Museum of Heartbreak by Meg Leder

Museum of Heartbreak

by Meg Leder

Penelope is a pretty regular sixteen year old girl living in New
York City. Except for a few run-ins with her nemesis Cherisse, high
school has been fairly drama free ... until the day that Keats
shows up at school. Handsome, charming, but with an edge, Keats
comes in and upends everything.

Faced with her first relationship, and her first heartbreak, Penelope
decides to put together a collection to tell her story and help
her sort out her feelings. The Museum of Heartbreak explores
the giddy confusion, inevitable sadness and sheer joy of growing
up and falling in love.

Reviewed by Sam@WLABB on

5 of 5 stars

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Aww, I am so in love with Meg Leder right now. This story was smart, funny, sweet, and heartfelt.

Our main character is Penelope. She has been part of a social "triangle" comprised of Audrey, Ephraim, and herself for many years, and she was happy with this arrangement. However, it seems that the other members of the triangle may be trying to redefine the friendship. They start talking about expanding their social circles, and this terrifies Pen. My heart ached for Pen as she tried to deal with the changes in the friendships that she believed were so solid, but I guess that is a part of growing up. The friendship had to evolve, because Eph and Audrey were changing. Pen struggled with this idea of her friends in the past and her friends in the present for most of the book, and it really tugged at my heartstrings.

that all that history didn't just disappear, even if the people we'd been then no longer existed.


Pen does attempt to expand her social circle, though. She develops a crush on a boy, Keats, and makes new friends through the literary magazine, but it is so hard for her to not want to share good news with Audrey or run to Eph to cry on his shoulder.

I had woken up that morning with a hangover of sadness


I keep talking about all the heartbreak (well, it is in the title), but this book is a lot of fun too. The banter and some of the narratives made me audibly giggle.

Right then a super-tall, thin, strawberry-blonde-haired, willowy girl, who probably had traveled on a unicorn straight from some mystical elven city to this particular moment, kneeled down next to Eph, handing him his skateboard like she was paying tribute to some king, and I barfed a little in my mouth.


Pen's head was sometimes a very fun place to be. She had this outrageous way of describing things, and she was also a little neurotic about things, which resulted in funny rants.

Divine intervention from Zeus or Thor or Buddha or the patron saint of single, unkissed sixteen-year-old girls seemed more likely.


Seriously, Ephraim -- "tall, handsome, hottie". I just loved him, and I loved the history he and Pen shared. They had quite a beautiful friendship. I adored when the two of them were together.

When we met, a tiny Superman putting his hand in mine, how you folded my fingers so gently around yours.


Overall: fantastic read. My heart pitter pattered, I shed a few tears, I laughed a lot, and I walked away from it all warm and fuzzy.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 6 June, 2016: Finished reading
  • 6 June, 2016: Reviewed