‘Conversations with Friends’ Demonstrates Sally Rooney’s Grasp on Messy Love

Author Sally Rooney has captured the world of young adults with her painfully accurate depictions of love.

Relationships in books, television shows and movies are dramatic — sensibly so, because audiences gravitate toward the sensational.

Rooney believes, however, that what most individuals experience are “normal relationships.” It’s a seemingly obvious conclusion, yet her acclaimed novel, “Normal People,” threw the publishing world off kilter.

Ingrained in the definition of normal are the counters of mental health issues, manipulation and disagreement. These topics are used as plot points in many narratives. Rooney recounts these issues within relationships as core to the human need for care.

Also, all too often, eating disorders, anxiety or gaslighting techniques are depicted as unusual in the game of love. However, they are quite ordinary, quite normal.

‘Normal People’

The main characters in “Normal People,” Marianne Sheridan and Connell Waldron, grow up in a small Irish town. They fall in love and experience the small steps that can lead to something great. Their love is also terribly sad, ridden with the mentioned complications. It reflects the feelings most teenagers and young adults have danced through with others.

“Normal People” was published in 2018 and became a best seller after just four months.

Hulu adapted the novel in a mini-series released in 2020. It was the BBC’s most-streamed television show of that year. The show received many awards and established Daisy Edgar-Jones as a breakout star.

‘Conversations
with Friends’

Fans of Sally Rooney will know that her novel “Conversations with Friends” came before her success with “Normal People.” It’s a fantastic story, following the same successful themes of “Normal People.” Recently, Hulu adapted the 2017 novel into a television show that aired May 15. Its 10 episodes are throbbingly beautiful.

As the title indicates, conversations with friends are normal. However, as everyone knows, conversations with friends, simple happenings among all those seeking connection experience, can tumble to dark extremes.

The story features two best friends, Bobbi Connolly and Frances Flynn, two college students in Dublin, both reaching for something as their final year in school approaches, once each other’s lovers.

Exes turned best friends, Bobbi and Frances continue with their lives. One night, when they read poetry out loud to an audience, a woman in her late 30s, Melissa, takes an interest in the pair.

She introduces them to the Dublin literary scene and her attractive husband, Nick. The separated couples are now an integrated foursome, a group of friends. The saga ignites. Their conversations establish stakes. Their friendships stretch and grow to more complicated connections.

Nick and Frances begin an affair. Melissa and Bobbi’s relationship proceeds down an uneasy, undefinable path. “Conversations with Friends” plays with our conceptions of love, pointing out the good and bad rules of intimacy and then washing them away with lust and fear.

It’s the pure messiness of the series that rings true. We are taught that real relationships avoid mess, but that’s not true. Rooney’s characters prove love is wholly messy. Even more, just as the book ends, the television series finishes unresolved.

It sounds cliché, but “Conversations with Friends” emphasizes that life goes on, mostly without its problems tied in neat bows. The complexity of the connections between Bobbi, Frances, Nick and Melissa cannot be concluded or compounded in a space such as structured television.

“Conversations with Friends” is also successful thanks to its cast. Joe Alwyn, who plays Nick, has won awards for his acting and musical contributions to work by his partner, Taylor Swift. Jemima Kirke, who plays Melissa, has earned raves for her role in the immensely popular television show “Sex Education.”

Frances is Alison Oliver’s debut role, and she astonishes alongside her seasoned castmates.

Hulu is where to find “Conversations with Friends” for those interested in the animation of Rooney’s unique writing.

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