Verwandte Artikel zu Friendship

Gould, Emily Friendship ISBN 13: 9781250070487

Friendship - Softcover

 
9781250070487: Friendship

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"Gould has created the kind of friendship that is not shallow, silly, or a plot sideline, but private, deep, and more real than almost anything else. It's enough to make your NPR

"A wry, sharply observed coming-of-age- story for the post-recession era." --People

"A vivid exploration of the missed connections and overwhelming isolation of modern urban life ... Compulsively readable." --Heather Havrilesky, The Los Angeles Times

"With Friendship, Gould establishes herself as a distinctively contemporary literary voice. Her dialogue resounds, and her dark humor gives texture to the prose. And though Friendship focuses on young women, readers need be neither young nor female in order to enjoy it....This is a very human story for any of us who have ever been jealous of a friend or wished our friends were more jealous of us." --Grace Bello, Christian Science Monitor

"A scintillating debut novel . . . No threat of veils here: just the biting, brilliant exploration of a modern female friendship." --Megan Labrise, Kirkus Reviews

"More than an exploration of friendship, this novel is about what happens when the things we take for granted slip away and we are forced to come up with new ways of being . . . Gould does a fine job capturing the women's frustrations, big and small, and the ways in which their friendship serves both as a hindrance and a means to maturing." --Shoshana Olidort, The Chicago Tribune

"Friendship, a slim, sometimes piercing novel, is a sharply observed chronicle of the inequality inherent in even the most valued friendships." --Alyssa Rosenberg, The Washington Post

"As Gould exposes [Amy and Bev's] messiness--their fights, mortifying Gchat convos, acts of self-sabotage -- she almost dares you to judge them. But the specificity of their struggles (peanut butter soup for dinner, anyone?) and Gould's hyperaware voice lend the story of their friendship poignance and shades of relatability. A-" --Stephan Lee, Entertainment Weekly

"Set in hipster Brookly, former Gawker editor Gould's latest centers on Bev and Amy, 30-year-olds struggling to be grown-ups in a world where moving back home while working for peanuts is often the only course. It's a wry, sharply observed coming-of-age story for the postrecession era." --People

"There's a difference between mere adulthood, which is legally defined, and being a grown-up, which is fuzzy and subjective. For the characters in Gould's funny and affecting debut novel, this difference is sharply felt . . . The novel's depiction of the dynamics of friendship--how there's often affection and admiration mixed with envy and competition--feels authentic. Gould's prose reads like the voice of the charmingly blunt friend you wish you had; her observations are hilarious and insightful. The portrayal of office ennui is depressingly accurate: Amy spends her time reading Wikipedia and checking Twitter, while Bev, collating papers, has a 'flash of wanting to smash something made of flesh, her own hand or someone else's.' There's a long tradition of novels about bright young women hoping to conquer New York. Many of these books culminate in glamorous self-actualization, but Friendship refuses this path. These characters must will themselves past disappointment and realistic problems--precarious finances, especially--and they don't end up where you'd expect. What they choose--it's the act of choosing that means everything--is as surprising as it is satisfying." --Naoko Asano, Maclean's

"Friendship is interested--almost single-mindedly so--in the friendship between Amy and her friend Bev, two women who are in the process of discovering that life as 30-year-old women in New York City is vastly different than it was as twentyish-year-old women in New York City. The poverty earned from a career in the publishing industry is no longer charming or noble; the string of half-assed relationships doesn't seem very romantic anymore . . . Friendship is refreshing in part because it's hugely uninterested in the men in Amy and Bev's lives; they're blurry figures, pushed over to the periphery to marinate in their monstrous desires or their bland hopes of commitment. They're not poorly sketched--they just barely matter to the women, and so they barely matter to us . . . Friendship is a positive step in Gould's evolution as a writer; the leap from nonfiction to fiction gave her permission to embrace an earnestness that previously escaped her." --Paul Constant, The Stranger

"It's easy to melt into the lives of these women as they deal with that particularly modern problem: becoming an adult at the age of 30. And though stories about women's friendship are very on-trend these days--from Sheila Heti's How Should A Person Be? to Girls to Broad City--it's hard to say no to another one, especially one as honest and lived-in as this one." --Sonia Saraiya, The AV Club

"In Ms. Gould's . . . often sharply observed first novel, Friendship . . . Amy and Bev have just crossed a microgenerational line into their 30s, and there's a self-conscious, faintly melancholy tone to [the novel]: the girls' sense of looking back on the turmoil (and, in Amy's case, hubris) of their swiftly receding 20s with both alarm and nostalgia, worried that things are starting to add up, that the clock is ticking more loudly now, that the arithmetic of their lives is changing . . . Depicting Amy and Bev in the third person gives Ms. Gould a measure of perspective on--and distance from--her characters, enabling her to depict their follies and foibles with a mixture of sympathy and humor. The novel form . . . also accentuates Ms. Gould's strengths as a writer . . . Whereas the blogs tended to create a self-portrait of the author as human word processor (automatically slicing, dicing and churning experience into prose), Friendship isn't the simple spewing (or venting or whining or knee-jerk reacting) of an obsessive oversharer. Rather, at its best, it points to Ms. Gould's abilities as a keen-eyed noticer and her knack for nailing down her ravenous observations with energy and flair." --Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times

"[Friendship is a] very fine first novel . . . Most of us know honesty as a virtue, and fewer know it as a sneaky concept in the craft of fiction. The latter honesty is about eschewing cliché, mastering particular skills for making the reader feel confided in. The novel, or publishing itself, might be in jeopardy, but writing will live as long as there remains the distinct pleasure of being told an honest thing. It's a little frightening, though; once transmuted into a literary principle, honesty becomes a talent of which almost none of us is truly capable . . . I submit that something like the following is unlikely and true: Emily Gould is one of the honest ones." --M. C. Mah, The Rumpus

"Gould is a gifted documentarian. The novel is filled with keenly observed details, especially about the outsize role that technology plays in her characters' lives. 'Are those Google predictions real?' Amy asks at one point. 'Do they work? They do, don't they. Okay, cool, another thing I have to start paying attention to so that my life can be fully efficient and optimized.' And Gould can draw a scathing character description: 'Shoshana's beauty disappeared the minute she opened her mouth; all that glowing skin and shimmering hair couldn't compensate for the kind of voice you immediately associate with someone calling from the temple sisterhood to remind you it's your turn to plate the oneg after Shabbat service.'" --Nora Krug, The Washington Post

"Two young women try to create the glamorous lives they've imagined for themselves while talking on Gchat from their desks at their less-than-ideal jobs. Bev left her cool-sounding but dispiriting entry-level position at a Manhattan publishing house to follow her boyfriend to the Midwest. Bad move. Now she's back in New York, single again, and temping. Amy was once famous for her work at a hot website-or maybe she was just notorious: '[N]ow that she was neither, it mattered less which one it had been.' She's been working for three years at Yidster, 'the third-most-popular online destination for cultural coverage with a modern Jewish angle, ' but is basically just floating through life on a diet of clicks and tweets, hoping her boyfriend will move in with her so she'll be able to keep paying the rent on her lovely brownstone apartment in Brooklyn. When Bev gets pregnant on a hilariously dreadful first date, the women are forced to confront their differing dreams and priorities. Plot takes a back seat to Gould's razor-sharp humor and observations about life in New York among a class of young people who know more about how they'd like to live than how to pay for it. It's also a delight to read a novel that places female friendship at its center; we watch Bev and Amy manage their fluctuating feelings of love, jealousy and sometimes disdain for each other. 'It seems improbable that this hasn't happened to us before, ' Amy says when she learns that Bev is pregnant. 'Us?' Bev replies. 'Are you going to start saying 'we're pregnant'? . . . We're not a couple, Amy.' They're not, but they are, and Gould brilliantly charts their ups and downs." --Kirkus (starred review)

"There is a sentimental delight in reading Friendship and its roller coaster ride of urban highs and lows . . . In the end, Gould draws a vivid and convincing portrait of a friendship--?in all of its human misunderstandings, disappointments, and brokenness . . . It is no small feat to animate and chart the emotional fluctuations and subtle contours of female friendships on the page . . . [Gould] illuminate[s] what it means to grow up together and then sometimes apart." --S. Kirk Walsh, The Virginia Quarterly Review

"Work--sustained creativity, the problems of receiving too much attention, too fast and too young, paycheques, temp gigs, what it all might add up to and protect from--is as much a theme of the book as friendship is. The novel has a disarmingly for-real sense of these kinds of women's lives, and features high-def, immersive verisimilitude about roommates, instant messages, storage units, job applications, buses, shirts, drinks and, largely, money; these are, of course, also the quotidian but hugely meaningful circumstances that create, maintain and end friendships, especially between women, especially in cities . . . Adult female friendships act as load-bearing walls, but they're also precarious: jealousy and judgments can rip them open in a day; errors in the careful balance sheet of neediness and interest in the other one's day undo years of emotional work. 'Sharply observed' is a gross cliché, but Friendship is Gould seeing and understanding the small and mounting details of what women like her want, what they have to do to get it, and what they do to ruin everything. Gould's first, best talent . . . is to see things as they are, like a craftsperson, like a writer of novels has to see them." --Kate Carraway, The Globe and Mail (Toronto)

"A savvy first novel that, in piercing prose, zeroes in on modern ennui and the catalysts that force even the most apathetic out of their complacency." --Booklist

"A sharp, sad, unforgiving (in a great way) and remarkably funny exploration of thirty-something female friendship." --Nerve

"Gould's novel is admirably, readably realistic--she knows these girls and the world they live in (including the omnipresence of technology and the way that it pervades relationships) . . . Gould nails the complex blend of love, loyalty, and resentment that binds female friends. It is worth reading for the richness of its details (at one point, Amy is overwhelmed by the desire to put an engaged coworker's wedding ring in her mouth), and it offers new insight into the experience of young women." --Publishers Weekly

"I read Friendship with great pleasure. Emily Gould re-creates with wit and insight the New York I know: a place full of fame and money that's not yours, where friends become family and lovers become ex-lovers, and the big questions about your life stay unanswered, and unanswerable, for a long time." --Chad Harbach, author of The Art of Fielding

"Friendship is especially honest about professional insecurity and personal uncertainty, which makes it an especially funny novel. And Emily Gould's prose sounds so admirably up-to-the-minute because it so faithfully observes classical principles of transparency and directness." --Benjamin Kunkel, author of Indecision

"Friendship is a moving, focused, highly readable, very funny novel, told with a calming amount of perspective by a trustworthy, precise voice. It is intimate and insightful regarding two decades of life (early twenties to middle age), and on the topics of endurance (emotional, financial), relationships (work, platonic, romantic--human), and jobs (temp, Internet, freelance art) in New York City." --Tao Lin, author of Taipei

"Truth-teller Emily Gould hurls her heart and her mind into this hilarious, bittersweet tale of the urgent, everyday need for connection between women." --Jami Attenberg, author of The Middlesteins

"The book . . . has moments of deep tenderness, spaces where the fundamental pain of being a non-affluent woman in a sexist capitalist culture is mitigated by the power of friendship and community. The confusion and woe the characters experience as they thrash around their tiny apartments and dysfunctional workplaces is funny and occasionally heartrending. In spite of how backwards some of the actions and beliefs of Amy and Bev seemed to me--or perhaps because of the backwardness--I found myself rooting for them. And in this way Friendship . . . is a hopeful book . . . This story itself, told by a woman, about women, is in some ways refreshing. The plainest thematic wisdom from the book, that our lives develop in relation to others, and that preservation of those relationships is sometimes at odds with our own development, is helpful. And having come up in a culture with a lot of unanswered questions, a dearth of cultural institutions that convincingly tell us (generationally) how to be, and for some of us, a real lack of spiritual possibility, the wish that we can sort it out and feel good about ourselves and our communities is both modest and also, in a subtle way, numinous." --Eli Schmitt, Full Stop

Reseña del editor

Dragged kicking and screaming into real adulthood, best friends Bev Tunney, who just found out she's pregnant, and Amy Schein, a spoiled East Coast princess, discover that growing up might mean growing apart as they try to help each other even though they can't help themselves. 25,000 first printing.

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  • VerlagMacmillan USA
  • Erscheinungsdatum2015
  • ISBN 10 1250070481
  • ISBN 13 9781250070487
  • EinbandTapa blanda
  • Anzahl der Seiten272

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