![]() Rooney has the gift of imbuing everyday life with a sense of high stakes, and it’s hard to imagine Conversations With Friends appearing without Elena Ferrante’s “Neapolitan Tetralogy” and Karl Ove Knausgaard’s My Struggle series as immediate antecedents. None of their struggles are out of the ordinary. They aren’t transgressive like Ellis’s pretty monsters. Frances and her friends, at age 21, are a little too old to be precocious in the manner of a Salinger character, nor are any of them desperate cases like Seymour Glass. Salinger, but those signals indicate little more than that you’re opening a novel about young people written by a young person. The novel’s blurbs and marketing materials invite comparisons to Bret Easton Ellis and J. D. ![]() They watch Greta Gerwig movies, and like Gerwig’s most famous character, the narrator is named Frances. The narrator and her friends are fans of Twitter poet laureate Patricia Lockwood. ![]() The first novel by the 26-year-old Irish writer Sally Rooney, Conversations With Friends, wears its influences on its sleeve. ![]()
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