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Conversations with Friends is the debut novel by the Irish author Sally Rooney , about two young women who become involved with an older couple in Dublin 's literary scene. The novel was published by Faber and Faber and received critical acclaim. A television adaptation, also called Conversations with Friends , was released in The book was completed whilst Rooney was still studying to write and complete her master's degree in American literature.
The novel was published in June by Faber and Faber. In Dublin , college students Frances the narrator and her best friend and ex-girlfriend Bobbi are noticed by Melissa, an essayist and photographer in her late thirties, when they are performing spoken-word poetry. Melissa invites them home, where they meet her husband, Nick, an actor. Their four lives become increasingly entangled as Frances begins an affair with Nick, and Bobbi and Melissa grow closer.
Conversations with Friends received positive reviews. According to Book Marks , the book received "positive" reviews based on eleven critic reviews with six being "rave" and four being "positive" and one being "mixed". Writing for The New Yorker , Alexandra Schwartz praises Rooney, noting that "she writes with a rare, thrilling confidence, in a lucid and exacting style uncluttered with the sort of steroidal imagery and strobe flashes of figurative language that so many dutifully literary novelists employ.
She is alert to the invisible bars imprisoning the apparently free. They relate to behavior and psychology—characters zigging when you expect them to zag, from passivity to sudden aggression and back. Bobbi, Frances, Nick, and Melissa excel at endearing banter and hesitant, vulnerable disclosure.