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The Friendship Cure

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
A compelling, fresh and thought-provoking exploration of friendship - what it is, how to keep it, and why we need it more than ever before.


Friendship is like water. We need it to survive, we crave it when it's scarce, it runs through our veins and yet we forget its value simply because it's always available. The basic compulsion to make friends is in our DNA; we've evolved, chimp-like, to seek out connection with other human beings. We move through life in packs and friendship circles and yet we are stuck in the greatest loneliness epidemic of our time. It's killing us, making us miserable and causing a public health crisis. But what if friendship is the solution, not the distraction?

Journalist Kate Leaver believes that friendship is the essential cure for the modern malaise of solitude, ignorance, ill health and angst. If we only treated camaraderie as a social priority, it could affect everything from our physical health and emotional well-being to our capacity to find a home, keep a job, get married, stay married, succeed, feed and understand ourselves.

In this witty, smart book - an appealing blend of science, pop culture and memoir - she meets scientists, speaks to old friends, finds extraordinary stories and uncovers research to look at what friendship is, how it feels, where it can survive, why we need it and what we can do to get the most from it - and how we might change the world if we value it properly.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 20, 2018
      Australian-British journalist Leaver sings the praises of friendship in this combination encomium, memoir, and pop psychology book. Though the title primes the reader to expect strategies for combating isolation, few are offered; this is actually a lengthy yet shallow exploration of what friendship looks and feels like in 2018. After a lighthearted tour through types, venues, and experiences of friendships (between men, between women, between men and women, online, at work, when depressed, when they’re ending)—which may alienate some readers with its uncritical embrace of evolutionary psychology, or the assumption that the reader is straight and cisgender—come two chapters about the prevalence of loneliness and the health benefits of friendship, and a single page of vague prescriptions (“we need an aggressive, worldwide campaign of greater kindness and a dramatic revamp of our values as a human race”). A straightforward memoir whose narrator experiences change between the first and last pages might have had more emotional weight; more idiosyncratic, less general insights might have had more value to the reader interested in friendship. But this combination of observations, anecdotes, and quotes from experts that circle the same point that friendship is important feels repetitive, static, and without anything truly new. Agent: Robyn Drury, Diane Banks Associates Ltd.

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Languages

  • English

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