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The Friend: A Novel

Description:

WINNER OF THE NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FOR FICTION

ONE OF
THE NEW YORK TIMES’S 100 BEST BOOKS OF THE 21ST CENTURY

NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE STARRING NAOMI WATTS

“A beautiful book . . . a world of insight into death, grief, art, and love.” —Wall Street Journal

A penetrating, moving meditation on loss, comfort, memory . . . Nunez has a wry, withering wit.” —NPR

Dry, allusive and charming . . . the comedy here writes itself.” The New York Times

The
New York Times bestselling story of love, friendship, grief, healing, and the magical bond between a woman and her dog.

When a woman unexpectedly loses her lifelong best friend and mentor, she finds herself burdened with the unwanted dog he has left behind. Her own battle against grief is intensified by the mute suffering of the dog, a huge Great Dane traumatized by the inexplicable disappearance of its master, and by the threat of eviction: dogs are prohibited in her apartment building.

While others worry that grief has made her a victim of magical thinking, the woman refuses to be separated from the dog except for brief periods of time. Isolated from the rest of the world, increasingly obsessed with the dog's care, determined to read its mind and fathom its heart, she comes dangerously close to unraveling. But while troubles abound, rich and surprising rewards lie in store for both of them.

Elegiac and searching,
The Friend is both a meditation on loss and a celebration of human-canine devotion.


Editorial Reviews

Review

“The contemplation of writing and the loss of integrity in our literary life form the heart of the novel...Nunez’s prose itself comforts us. Her confident and direct style uplifts—the music in her sentences, her deep and varied intelligence. She addresses important ideas unpretentiously and offers wisdom for any aspiring writer who, as the narrator fears, may never know this dear, intelligent friend—or this world that is dying. But is it dying? Perhaps. But with The Friend, Nunez provides evidence that, for now, it survives.” —The New York Times Book Review

"Charming... the comedy here writes itself... the novel's tone in general, however, is mournful and resonant... The snap of her sentences sometimes puts me in mind of Rachel Cusk." —
The New York Times

“In crystalline prose, Nunez creates an impressively controlled portrait of the ‘exhaustion of mourning.’” 
—The New Yorker

“Everywhere in this novel it is impossible to separate love and companionship from loss...The Friend is one of those rare novels that, in the end, makes your heart beat slower.” —Los Angeles Review of Books

“A beautiful book … crammed with a world of insight into death, grief, art, and love.” Wall Street Journal

"A meditation on reading and writing, love and loss,
The Friend is a work rich in literary allusions and anecdotes….With The Friend . . .  [Nunez’s] found the perfect pitch….Nunez’s prose is illuminated by a wit, warmth and wisdom all of her own. The Friend is a true delight: I genuinely fear I won’t read a better novel this year.” — The Financial Times

"A penetrating, moving meditation on loss, comfort, memory, what it means to be a writer today, and various forms of love and friendship... Nunez has a wry, withering wit.” —NPR

“The book is an intimate, beautiful thing, deceptively slight at around 200 pages, but humming with insight… [an] artfully discursive meditation on friendship, love, death, solitude, canine companionship and the life of an aging writer in New York. Far from being heavy going, this novel, written as a letter to the late friend, is peppered with wry observations, particularly those of a writer stuck teaching undergraduates.” –The Economist

In this slim but pitch-perfect novel, a writer loses her best friend and mentor suddenly without explanation…Wry and moving, The Friend is a love story, a mania story, and a recovery story.” —Vanity Fair

“A poignant reflection on loss and companionship.” —
Marie Claire

“[A] sneaky gut punch of a novel…a consummate example of the human-animal tale…The Friend’s tone is dry, clear, direct—which is the surest way to carry off this sort of close-up study of anguish and attachment.” —Harper's Magazine

“A wry riff on Rilke’s idea of love as two solitudes that ‘protect and border and greet each other.’”—
Vogue

"With enormous heart and eloquence, Nunez explores cerebral responses to loss… The Friend exposes an extraordinary reserve of strength waiting to be found in storytelling and unexpected companionship.” —Minneapolis Star-Tribune

"Often as funny as it is thoughtful, The Friend is an elegant meditation on grief, friendship, healing, and the bonds between humans and dogs." —Buzzfeed

“A serious book about a big sloppy dog, Nunez’s seventh novel… displays the intellectual heft of her late friend’s work, but also a distinctive sense of humor and narrative momentum.” Vulture

“A brilliant examination of the writer’s life, literary friendship, mortality, bereavement, and our relationship to animals. The novel is not easily summarized; the true rewards of this reading experience are the crystalline prose… Readers will also savor the surprising shifts in narrative focus.”—The Rumpus

"An elegant and darkly humorous meditation on grief and companionship, it's a great read — whether or not you're obsessed with canines.” —Shondaland.com

“Sigrid Nunez’s novel delivers an enthralling, emotional tale.” —Paste Magazine

"The Friend is proof that what we lack is itself a vital part of life — and that loss can lead to meaningful connections found in unlikely places. Sometimes it can take an animal to make a person understand their own humanity. And sometimes a book as unexpected as The Friend can provide as much comfort as any canine companion.” —B&N Review

“Quietly brilliant and darkly funny… [
The Friend is] rigorous and stark, so elegant—so dismissive of conventional notions of plot—it hardly feels like fiction. Breathtaking both in pain and in beauty; a singular book.” —Kirkus, starred review

“Riveting… This elegant novel explores both rich memories and day-to-day mundanity, reflecting the way that, especially in grief, the past is often more vibrant than the present.” —
Publishers Weekly

“Light, musing, curious, and somehow wonderfully
sturdy.” –Vivian Gornick for Bookforum

“Brilliant but informal, sad yet laugh-out-loud funny… This beautiful, spare, work will not disappoint.” –
Bookpage

“Nunez offers an often-hilarious, always-penetrating look at writing, grief, and the companionship of dogs.” —
Booklist

"The joys of this novel lie in Nunez’s striking capacity to describe the world and its inhabitants, both human and animal. Nunez is a keen observer of behavior, and throughout the text she plants wonderful nuggets that immediately ring true yet still manage to be surprising.” —Michigan Daily

“A slow, poignant meditation on grief, rife with pithy literary myths and quotations… Literature nerds, creative writing students, and dog lovers will find this work delightful. Recommended for literary fiction collections.” —
Library Journal 
 
“Nunez’s story of a dog and his inadvertent caregiver is a darkly humorous and unsentimental tale of friendship, mourning, and solace.”—
Electric Lit

“The intensity and elegance of
The Friend mean two things—you cannot put it down and you will cry. In a novel about loss and the loneliness of writing and imagination, Sigrid Nunez creates an irresistible tale of love and an unforgettable Great Dane. A beautiful, beautiful book—the most original canine love story since My Dog Tulip.” —Cathleen Schine, bestselling author of They May Not Mean To, But They Do

About the Author

Sigrid Nunez is the author of the novels Salvation City, The Last of Her Kind, A Feather on the Breath of God, and For Rouenna, among others. She is also the author of Sempre Susan: A Memoir of Susan Sontag. She has been the recipient of several awards, including a Whiting Award, the Rome Prize in Literature, and a Berlin Prize Fellowship. Nunez lives in New York City.

Reviews:

5.0 out of 5 stars Genius

t.s. · September 18, 2025

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4.0 out of 5 stars Well written and thought provoking

T.W. · October 20, 2025

Great writing. A difficult subject handled in a very novel way. Explores themes like death, absence and grieving and our relationship with animals (and their relationship with us).

3.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful sentences don’t always add up to a beautiful story

M.C. · March 9, 2020

Let me preface this by saying that I think I’m a fairly intelligent and well-read individual, but perhaps the intent and underlying themes of this story flew past me. Somebody who analyzes literature better than I do may think I’m sounding like a third-grader. So be it. Here’s what I thought…First the good. I truly believe that Sigrid Nunez is a tremendously talented writer. That was drilled home to me every now and then, and pretty unexpectedly, by beautifully turned sentences, flawless phrasing, and expressions that perfectly described thoughts and observations. I would be reading a paragraph and thinking “Eh, this is okay”, and then I hit a sentence or a sentiment that just stood out as a peach, and made me stop and read it a few times over just to appreciate it. Almost all of this came in the narrator’s interactions with the dog. I’d go so far as to call it poetry, but it’s not; these tend to be simple, unadorned observations that plainly express sentiments with which any dog lover will be familiar. It’s written in simple human language drenched in humanity. The author is clearly an artist with words.Not having ever taken a course in creative writing, I also enjoyed picking out certain literary techniques that enhanced the story. I loved the way the object of the narration (the “you” in the story) changed from the recently deceased writer friend throughout 90% of the book to in the last chapter being her new friend, the dog. It drives home who “The Friend” is.But… here’s where I’m going to gripe. I’m really pretty tired of characters who are writers constantly complaining about how hard and painful writing is, like they are this special breed of humans who suffer for their art any more than any of us suffer for our chosen profession. If writing is so hard, well, get over yourself and do something else. Quit your belly-achin’. The narrator and her dead friend both seem like arrogant, uppity snobs that I probably wouldn’t like very much if they were my personal acquaintances, both wallowing in their angst and despair. And to top off the snobbery, the constant references to other authors and literary works, dropping in names and quotes like these people only think in these superior, erudite reflections so far above the mental capacity of normal humans… it all seems like something a writing snob would do just to show off one’s superiority and literary grandiosity. Really ostentatious. It was just way too much, and every time it came up I liked the narrator less. All I could think was, get back to the dog.Now maybe I’m missing the whole point. Maybe the point is having this dog and coming to love this dog every bit as much as she loved the deceased writer turned the narrator into a better person. The dog as a personality has so much more grace and nobility than the dead writer did, and it taught her to value those traits so much more than the literary snobbery she was so used to. Yeah, I like that explanation. If I look at it that way, maybe I liked this book more than I thought I did when I finished reading it.

5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful

J.T. · August 4, 2025

First time I've read her. Stunning. I went from an older crappie book that was cheesy, full of cliches, just a pure escape to this book, which is so cerebral, deep and a thought provoking and such an interesting read. I'm so glad I found her. Sigrid. Thank you for your beautiful work and words. 🎶P.S. kinda made me worry about suicide and about writers, of which I am one. I had no idea writers were so frowned upon and so harshly judged these days. And I really don't want to either. I have enough things in my head that deter me from my writing. Fear of failure, fear of not being good enough or my book topic being too light, which it's really not. Now I have to fear all this stuff about writing about sex, which I have, according to this book. YeeshHell, I gotta be me! 😊

5.0 out of 5 stars dont hurry the reading

p.r. · September 14, 2025

simultaneous talk and reading with sigrid nunez,true emotiions sincere trivia , a wonderful bookran perez

4.0 out of 5 stars Friendship and its complexity

L. · June 22, 2025

I reread this book in anticipation of a book club discussion. I predicted that many other members would insist that the main thrust of the story is about the relationships between people and dogs. People and dogs figure prominently in the novel since the storyteller reluctantly takes a Great Dane from her friend’s third wife when her friend commits suicide. Is the dog, named Apollo, truly grieving? Are dogs capable of loyalty and other human-like traits, or is this foolish anthropomorphism? The book club discussion turned out great. The group appreciated the plot points about the dog, named after a Greek god to illustrate its importance, but also went beyond that relationship to delve into the commentary about life.The book was not mainly about dogs, but rather about the complex nature of human friendships. It also addressed the possibility of a man and a woman having a platonic friendship. Further, Nunez delves into suicide in society and literature. What I liked most about the book was the focus on literature and writing. The storyteller teaches writing, and the narrative is addressed to her friend, who was an accomplished writing teacher. Questions about what constitutes good writing and how teachers and students survive a college writing program are consistent themes in the narrative. There are many literary quotes, and Nunez also explores the value of therapeutic writing.There is a little twist near the end that further clarifies the power of characters and literature. The book appeals to both readers and writers. There are passages in this novel that describe the cathartic nature of writing and how it serves as an expression of oneself. Writing allows characters and humans to process emotions. There are many questions posed about the power of writing. For instance, if you write about persons you are grieving, are you preserving memories or eternally burying them? In other words, the book explored questions such as, “Do writing and photography destroy or preserve memories?”

Wonderful book

P. · October 15, 2023

(function() { P.when('cr-A', 'ready').execute(function(A) { if(typeof A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel === 'function') { A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel('review_text_read_more', 'Read more of this review', 'Read less of this review'); } }); })(); .review-text-read-more-expander:focus-visible { outline: 2px solid #2162a1; outline-offset: 2px; border-radius: 5px; } Absolutely brilliant! Fabulously written and wonderful content.

Tolles Buch 📗

F. · January 26, 2025

Schönes Buch!

The friend quando le solitudini si incontrano

m.p. · August 9, 2019

Piacevolissima lettura in originale. Ottima scrittura. Un viaggio nell ambiguità dei rapporti di amicizia uomo donna senza sesso .Un percorso sul senso dello scrivere. Lo sconvolgimento della condizione dell” essere umano nella sua solitudine nell incontro col mondo animale.

A MODERN CLASSIC

D. · June 24, 2025

One of the greatest stories in modern literature. This will be a must read in schools and writing classes.If I had the means I would buy this for everyone.

Beautiful, contemplative and engaging.

K. · August 19, 2025

Exquisite. I have just finished reading it and tears are pouring down my face. “What we miss, what we lose and what we mourn - isn’t this what makes us who, deep down, we truly are.” I loved this novel about love, suicide, aging and a Great Dane

The Friend: A Novel

Product ID: U0735219451
Condition: New

4

AED9522

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Type: Paperback
Availability: In Stock

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Order today to get by 7-14 business days

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Imported From: United States

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More from this brand

Similar items from “Animals”

The Friend: A Novel

Product ID: U0735219451
Condition: New

4

The Friend: A Novel-0
Type: Paperback

AED9522

Price includes VAT & Import Duties
Availability: In Stock

Quantity:

|

Order today to get by 7-14 business days

Delivery fee of AED 20. Free for orders above AED 200.

Returns & Warranty policies

Imported From: United States

At BOLO, we work hard to ensure the products you receive are new, genuine, and sourced from reputable suppliers.

BOLO is not an authorized or official retailer for most brands, nor are we affiliated with manufacturers unless specifically stated on a product page. Instead, we source verified sellers, authorized distributors or directly from the manufacturer.

Each product undergoes thorough inspection and verification at our consolidation and fulfilment centers to ensure it meets our strict authenticity and quality standards before being shipped and delivered to you.

If you ever have concerns regarding the authenticity of a product purchased from us, please contact Bolo Support. We will review your inquiry promptly and, if necessary, provide documentation verifying authenticity or offer a suitable resolution.

Your trust is our top priority, and we are committed to maintaining transparency and integrity in every transaction.

All product information, images, descriptions, and reviews originate from the manufacturer or from trusted sellers overseas. BOLO is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or an authorized retailer for most brands listed on our website unless stated otherwise.

While we strive to display accurate information, variations in packaging, labeling, instructions, or formulation may occasionally occur due to regional differences or supplier updates. For detailed or manufacturer-specific information, please contact the brand directly or reach out to BOLO Support for assistance.

Unless otherwise stated, all prices displayed on the product page include applicable taxes and import duties.

BOLO operates in accordance with the laws and regulations of United Arab Emirates. Any items found to be restricted or prohibited for sale within the UAE will be cancelled prior to shipment. We take proactive measures to ensure that only products permitted for sale in United Arab Emirates are listed on our website.

All items are shipped by air, and any products classified as “Dangerous Goods (DG)” under IATA regulations will be removed from the order and cancelled.

All orders are processed manually, and we make every effort to process them promptly once confirmed. Products cancelled due to the above reasons will be permanently removed from listings across the website.

Description:

WINNER OF THE NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FOR FICTION

ONE OF
THE NEW YORK TIMES’S 100 BEST BOOKS OF THE 21ST CENTURY

NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE STARRING NAOMI WATTS

“A beautiful book . . . a world of insight into death, grief, art, and love.” —Wall Street Journal

A penetrating, moving meditation on loss, comfort, memory . . . Nunez has a wry, withering wit.” —NPR

Dry, allusive and charming . . . the comedy here writes itself.” The New York Times

The
New York Times bestselling story of love, friendship, grief, healing, and the magical bond between a woman and her dog.

When a woman unexpectedly loses her lifelong best friend and mentor, she finds herself burdened with the unwanted dog he has left behind. Her own battle against grief is intensified by the mute suffering of the dog, a huge Great Dane traumatized by the inexplicable disappearance of its master, and by the threat of eviction: dogs are prohibited in her apartment building.

While others worry that grief has made her a victim of magical thinking, the woman refuses to be separated from the dog except for brief periods of time. Isolated from the rest of the world, increasingly obsessed with the dog's care, determined to read its mind and fathom its heart, she comes dangerously close to unraveling. But while troubles abound, rich and surprising rewards lie in store for both of them.

Elegiac and searching,
The Friend is both a meditation on loss and a celebration of human-canine devotion.


Editorial Reviews

Review

“The contemplation of writing and the loss of integrity in our literary life form the heart of the novel...Nunez’s prose itself comforts us. Her confident and direct style uplifts—the music in her sentences, her deep and varied intelligence. She addresses important ideas unpretentiously and offers wisdom for any aspiring writer who, as the narrator fears, may never know this dear, intelligent friend—or this world that is dying. But is it dying? Perhaps. But with The Friend, Nunez provides evidence that, for now, it survives.” —The New York Times Book Review

"Charming... the comedy here writes itself... the novel's tone in general, however, is mournful and resonant... The snap of her sentences sometimes puts me in mind of Rachel Cusk." —
The New York Times

“In crystalline prose, Nunez creates an impressively controlled portrait of the ‘exhaustion of mourning.’” 
—The New Yorker

“Everywhere in this novel it is impossible to separate love and companionship from loss...The Friend is one of those rare novels that, in the end, makes your heart beat slower.” —Los Angeles Review of Books

“A beautiful book … crammed with a world of insight into death, grief, art, and love.” Wall Street Journal

"A meditation on reading and writing, love and loss,
The Friend is a work rich in literary allusions and anecdotes….With The Friend . . .  [Nunez’s] found the perfect pitch….Nunez’s prose is illuminated by a wit, warmth and wisdom all of her own. The Friend is a true delight: I genuinely fear I won’t read a better novel this year.” — The Financial Times

"A penetrating, moving meditation on loss, comfort, memory, what it means to be a writer today, and various forms of love and friendship... Nunez has a wry, withering wit.” —NPR

“The book is an intimate, beautiful thing, deceptively slight at around 200 pages, but humming with insight… [an] artfully discursive meditation on friendship, love, death, solitude, canine companionship and the life of an aging writer in New York. Far from being heavy going, this novel, written as a letter to the late friend, is peppered with wry observations, particularly those of a writer stuck teaching undergraduates.” –The Economist

In this slim but pitch-perfect novel, a writer loses her best friend and mentor suddenly without explanation…Wry and moving, The Friend is a love story, a mania story, and a recovery story.” —Vanity Fair

“A poignant reflection on loss and companionship.” —
Marie Claire

“[A] sneaky gut punch of a novel…a consummate example of the human-animal tale…The Friend’s tone is dry, clear, direct—which is the surest way to carry off this sort of close-up study of anguish and attachment.” —Harper's Magazine

“A wry riff on Rilke’s idea of love as two solitudes that ‘protect and border and greet each other.’”—
Vogue

"With enormous heart and eloquence, Nunez explores cerebral responses to loss… The Friend exposes an extraordinary reserve of strength waiting to be found in storytelling and unexpected companionship.” —Minneapolis Star-Tribune

"Often as funny as it is thoughtful, The Friend is an elegant meditation on grief, friendship, healing, and the bonds between humans and dogs." —Buzzfeed

“A serious book about a big sloppy dog, Nunez’s seventh novel… displays the intellectual heft of her late friend’s work, but also a distinctive sense of humor and narrative momentum.” Vulture

“A brilliant examination of the writer’s life, literary friendship, mortality, bereavement, and our relationship to animals. The novel is not easily summarized; the true rewards of this reading experience are the crystalline prose… Readers will also savor the surprising shifts in narrative focus.”—The Rumpus

"An elegant and darkly humorous meditation on grief and companionship, it's a great read — whether or not you're obsessed with canines.” —Shondaland.com

“Sigrid Nunez’s novel delivers an enthralling, emotional tale.” —Paste Magazine

"The Friend is proof that what we lack is itself a vital part of life — and that loss can lead to meaningful connections found in unlikely places. Sometimes it can take an animal to make a person understand their own humanity. And sometimes a book as unexpected as The Friend can provide as much comfort as any canine companion.” —B&N Review

“Quietly brilliant and darkly funny… [
The Friend is] rigorous and stark, so elegant—so dismissive of conventional notions of plot—it hardly feels like fiction. Breathtaking both in pain and in beauty; a singular book.” —Kirkus, starred review

“Riveting… This elegant novel explores both rich memories and day-to-day mundanity, reflecting the way that, especially in grief, the past is often more vibrant than the present.” —
Publishers Weekly

“Light, musing, curious, and somehow wonderfully
sturdy.” –Vivian Gornick for Bookforum

“Brilliant but informal, sad yet laugh-out-loud funny… This beautiful, spare, work will not disappoint.” –
Bookpage

“Nunez offers an often-hilarious, always-penetrating look at writing, grief, and the companionship of dogs.” —
Booklist

"The joys of this novel lie in Nunez’s striking capacity to describe the world and its inhabitants, both human and animal. Nunez is a keen observer of behavior, and throughout the text she plants wonderful nuggets that immediately ring true yet still manage to be surprising.” —Michigan Daily

“A slow, poignant meditation on grief, rife with pithy literary myths and quotations… Literature nerds, creative writing students, and dog lovers will find this work delightful. Recommended for literary fiction collections.” —
Library Journal 
 
“Nunez’s story of a dog and his inadvertent caregiver is a darkly humorous and unsentimental tale of friendship, mourning, and solace.”—
Electric Lit

“The intensity and elegance of
The Friend mean two things—you cannot put it down and you will cry. In a novel about loss and the loneliness of writing and imagination, Sigrid Nunez creates an irresistible tale of love and an unforgettable Great Dane. A beautiful, beautiful book—the most original canine love story since My Dog Tulip.” —Cathleen Schine, bestselling author of They May Not Mean To, But They Do

About the Author

Sigrid Nunez is the author of the novels Salvation City, The Last of Her Kind, A Feather on the Breath of God, and For Rouenna, among others. She is also the author of Sempre Susan: A Memoir of Susan Sontag. She has been the recipient of several awards, including a Whiting Award, the Rome Prize in Literature, and a Berlin Prize Fellowship. Nunez lives in New York City.

Reviews:

5.0 out of 5 stars Genius

t.s. · September 18, 2025

(function() { P.when('cr-A', 'ready').execute(function(A) { if(typeof A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel === 'function') { A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel('review_text_read_more', 'Read more of this review', 'Read less of this review'); } }); })(); .review-text-read-more-expander:focus-visible { outline: 2px solid #2162a1; outline-offset: 2px; border-radius: 5px; } Wonder, intelligent novel that is both has reflexive as it is thoughtful. Nunez is concerned with the plight of women and most important animals who do not have a voice. The structure is genius, the ideas salient and important! Deeply moving and important book!!!

4.0 out of 5 stars Well written and thought provoking

T.W. · October 20, 2025

Great writing. A difficult subject handled in a very novel way. Explores themes like death, absence and grieving and our relationship with animals (and their relationship with us).

3.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful sentences don’t always add up to a beautiful story

M.C. · March 9, 2020

Let me preface this by saying that I think I’m a fairly intelligent and well-read individual, but perhaps the intent and underlying themes of this story flew past me. Somebody who analyzes literature better than I do may think I’m sounding like a third-grader. So be it. Here’s what I thought…First the good. I truly believe that Sigrid Nunez is a tremendously talented writer. That was drilled home to me every now and then, and pretty unexpectedly, by beautifully turned sentences, flawless phrasing, and expressions that perfectly described thoughts and observations. I would be reading a paragraph and thinking “Eh, this is okay”, and then I hit a sentence or a sentiment that just stood out as a peach, and made me stop and read it a few times over just to appreciate it. Almost all of this came in the narrator’s interactions with the dog. I’d go so far as to call it poetry, but it’s not; these tend to be simple, unadorned observations that plainly express sentiments with which any dog lover will be familiar. It’s written in simple human language drenched in humanity. The author is clearly an artist with words.Not having ever taken a course in creative writing, I also enjoyed picking out certain literary techniques that enhanced the story. I loved the way the object of the narration (the “you” in the story) changed from the recently deceased writer friend throughout 90% of the book to in the last chapter being her new friend, the dog. It drives home who “The Friend” is.But… here’s where I’m going to gripe. I’m really pretty tired of characters who are writers constantly complaining about how hard and painful writing is, like they are this special breed of humans who suffer for their art any more than any of us suffer for our chosen profession. If writing is so hard, well, get over yourself and do something else. Quit your belly-achin’. The narrator and her dead friend both seem like arrogant, uppity snobs that I probably wouldn’t like very much if they were my personal acquaintances, both wallowing in their angst and despair. And to top off the snobbery, the constant references to other authors and literary works, dropping in names and quotes like these people only think in these superior, erudite reflections so far above the mental capacity of normal humans… it all seems like something a writing snob would do just to show off one’s superiority and literary grandiosity. Really ostentatious. It was just way too much, and every time it came up I liked the narrator less. All I could think was, get back to the dog.Now maybe I’m missing the whole point. Maybe the point is having this dog and coming to love this dog every bit as much as she loved the deceased writer turned the narrator into a better person. The dog as a personality has so much more grace and nobility than the dead writer did, and it taught her to value those traits so much more than the literary snobbery she was so used to. Yeah, I like that explanation. If I look at it that way, maybe I liked this book more than I thought I did when I finished reading it.

5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful

J.T. · August 4, 2025

First time I've read her. Stunning. I went from an older crappie book that was cheesy, full of cliches, just a pure escape to this book, which is so cerebral, deep and a thought provoking and such an interesting read. I'm so glad I found her. Sigrid. Thank you for your beautiful work and words. 🎶P.S. kinda made me worry about suicide and about writers, of which I am one. I had no idea writers were so frowned upon and so harshly judged these days. And I really don't want to either. I have enough things in my head that deter me from my writing. Fear of failure, fear of not being good enough or my book topic being too light, which it's really not. Now I have to fear all this stuff about writing about sex, which I have, according to this book. YeeshHell, I gotta be me! 😊

5.0 out of 5 stars dont hurry the reading

p.r. · September 14, 2025

simultaneous talk and reading with sigrid nunez,true emotiions sincere trivia , a wonderful bookran perez

4.0 out of 5 stars Friendship and its complexity

L. · June 22, 2025

I reread this book in anticipation of a book club discussion. I predicted that many other members would insist that the main thrust of the story is about the relationships between people and dogs. People and dogs figure prominently in the novel since the storyteller reluctantly takes a Great Dane from her friend’s third wife when her friend commits suicide. Is the dog, named Apollo, truly grieving? Are dogs capable of loyalty and other human-like traits, or is this foolish anthropomorphism? The book club discussion turned out great. The group appreciated the plot points about the dog, named after a Greek god to illustrate its importance, but also went beyond that relationship to delve into the commentary about life.The book was not mainly about dogs, but rather about the complex nature of human friendships. It also addressed the possibility of a man and a woman having a platonic friendship. Further, Nunez delves into suicide in society and literature. What I liked most about the book was the focus on literature and writing. The storyteller teaches writing, and the narrative is addressed to her friend, who was an accomplished writing teacher. Questions about what constitutes good writing and how teachers and students survive a college writing program are consistent themes in the narrative. There are many literary quotes, and Nunez also explores the value of therapeutic writing.There is a little twist near the end that further clarifies the power of characters and literature. The book appeals to both readers and writers. There are passages in this novel that describe the cathartic nature of writing and how it serves as an expression of oneself. Writing allows characters and humans to process emotions. There are many questions posed about the power of writing. For instance, if you write about persons you are grieving, are you preserving memories or eternally burying them? In other words, the book explored questions such as, “Do writing and photography destroy or preserve memories?”

Wonderful book

P. · October 15, 2023

(function() { P.when('cr-A', 'ready').execute(function(A) { if(typeof A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel === 'function') { A.toggleExpanderAriaLabel('review_text_read_more', 'Read more of this review', 'Read less of this review'); } }); })(); .review-text-read-more-expander:focus-visible { outline: 2px solid #2162a1; outline-offset: 2px; border-radius: 5px; } Absolutely brilliant! Fabulously written and wonderful content.

Tolles Buch 📗

F. · January 26, 2025

Schönes Buch!

The friend quando le solitudini si incontrano

m.p. · August 9, 2019

Piacevolissima lettura in originale. Ottima scrittura. Un viaggio nell ambiguità dei rapporti di amicizia uomo donna senza sesso .Un percorso sul senso dello scrivere. Lo sconvolgimento della condizione dell” essere umano nella sua solitudine nell incontro col mondo animale.

A MODERN CLASSIC

D. · June 24, 2025

One of the greatest stories in modern literature. This will be a must read in schools and writing classes.If I had the means I would buy this for everyone.

Beautiful, contemplative and engaging.

K. · August 19, 2025

Exquisite. I have just finished reading it and tears are pouring down my face. “What we miss, what we lose and what we mourn - isn’t this what makes us who, deep down, we truly are.” I loved this novel about love, suicide, aging and a Great Dane

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