The Friendship Breakup
A Novel
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5.0 • 1 Rating
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- $22.99
Publisher Description
For fans of Laura Hankin and Jennifer Weiner, this fresh, clever, and complex debut "mom-com" explores the ups and downs of friendship and what happens when those you trust the most leave you high and dry.
A plucky protagonist who’s far from figuring it all out—but powers through with wit and determination—Fallon is a heroine millennial moms will instantly connect with.
Fallon Monroe, mother of one, self-help book junkie, and budding chocolatier, has always relied on her mom friends in the Chicago suburbs to get her through the trials of adulthood. So when her bestie Beatrice inexplicably starts ghosting her and takes all their mutual friends with her, Fallon’s left wondering how everything went so wrong. Pushing down a lifetime of insecurities, Fallon doubles down and decides to win them back. First, she hosts an epic Mexican fiesta that goes epically wrong. Then she joins a friendship app but discovers a disturbing secret about one of her new friends.
Just when she’s about to throw in the towel on the whole friendship mess, Fallon reads a recently unearthed letter she’d refused to deal with decades earlier—and reading it forces her to finally face the deep-seated fears she’d desperately tried to bury. Now, looking at her friendships through fresh eyes, she must decide between hanging on and letting go.
Fallon is an instantly likeable heroine—as vulnerable as she is determined—and she’ll have readers eagerly turning the pages as they join her on an emotional journey into the hopes and fears of adulthood.
Customer Reviews
Immersive, Emotional & Heartfelt
Annie Cathryn's "The Friendship Breakup" is a heartfelt, immersive book; a blanket-hugging read full of laughter, emotion and contemplation. Fallon Monroe is such a perfectly unperfect character who finds herself isolated from the mom group, which takes her down a path of deep reminiscing and reflection. Annie's writing is so immersive and inviting, and one feels that you are right there with the characters as the scenes unfold. I connected with Fallon as a young woman in college courtesy of the flashbacks, a daughter fulfilling her obligations and standing up for her friends and herself. The scenes with the therapist are beautifully written, evoking personal thought and reflection. At times, I did feel that I was venturing into the self-help textbook solutions, but our protagonist is a "self-help book junkie." But it didn't take away from the central message that the beauty of life is in the pauses and immersing yourself with what is, even when what should be, doesn't figure out in the chapters. A 5-star read!
Thank you to NetGalley and Alcove Press for inviting me to read this fantastic debut novel. I highly recommend this read for fiction-feel-good lovers.