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B.F.F. : a memoir of friendship lost and found /

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York, NY : Avid Reader Press, 2023Edition: First Avid Reader Press hardcover editionDescription: xii, 289 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781668009420
  • 1668009420
Other title:
  • Best friends forever
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 616.89/153092 B 23/eng/20221219
Summary: Reflects on the author's lifelong struggles to sustain female friendship and how the return of an old friend helped her explore the reasons she has avoided attachment.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Standard Loan Coeur d'Alene Library Adult Biography Coeur d'Alene Library Book B TATE TATE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610023319598
Standard Loan Hayden Library Adult Biography Hayden Library Book TATE-TATE (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610024240553
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

* "A love story about the miracle of friendship." --Maggie Smith * "Fearless and unflinching." -- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette *

From the author of Group , a New York Times bestseller and Reese's Book Club Pick, a poignant, funny, and emotionally satisfying memoir about Christie Tate's lifelong struggle to sustain female friendship, and the extraordinary friend who changed everything.

After more than a decade of dead-end dates and dysfunctional relationships, Christie Tate has reclaimed her voice and settled down. Her days of agonizing in group therapy over guys who won't commit are over, the grueling emotional work required to attach to another person tucked neatly into the past.

Or so she thought. Weeks after giddily sharing stories of her new boyfriend at Saturday morning recovery meetings, Christie receives a gift from a friend. Meredith, twenty years older and always impeccably accessorized, gives Christie a box of holiday-themed scarves as well as a gentle suggestion: maybe now is the perfect time to examine why friendships give her trouble. "The work never ends, right?" she says with a wink.

Christie isn't so sure, but she soon realizes that the feeling of "apartness" that has plagued her since childhood isn't magically going away now that she's in a healthy romantic relationship. With Meredith by her side, she embarks on a brutally honest exploration of her friendships past and present, sorting through the ways that debilitating shame and jealousy have kept the lasting bonds she craves out of reach--and how she can overcome a history of letting go too soon.

"An outstanding portrait of self-excavation" ( Publishers Weekly , starred review), BFF explores what happens when we finally break the habits that impair our ability to connect with others, and the ways that one life--however messy and imperfect--can change another.

Reflects on the author's lifelong struggles to sustain female friendship and how the return of an old friend helped her explore the reasons she has avoided attachment.

Excerpt provided by Syndetics

Chapter 1 1. I met Meredith in December 1998, and I still remember her outfit. A red blazer, multicolored silk scarf, gold pin. Black leather shoes with a kitten heel. A pencil skirt. Boniest ankles you ever saw. Her hair was blond with a few gray streaks, and her manicured nails were a pale pink that today I could identify as Essie's Ballet Slippers. She stacked multiple rings on several fingers of both hands, which clacked softly when she gestured. Later, I told her she'd looked like a meteorologist from the eighties with that scarf and pin. "I was jealous of how put together you were--the outfit, the manicure." At the time, I was twenty-five years old; Meredith was in her mid-forties. We met at a recovery meeting held in the back booth of a Swedish diner on the North Side of Chicago. The purpose of the meeting was to help the friends and family members of alcoholics--anyone who loved a drunk, basically--reclaim their lives from the chaos of being intimately involved with someone who drinks too much. People had been recommending this recovery program to me for many years--starting with a biology teacher in high school who knew I was dating a basketball player who liked to party--and I'd refused, even though I spent half a dozen biology classes crying over the basketball player's infidelity and nonstop pot smoking. No, not for me. Sophomore year of college, I found my way to a different twelve-step program, one for people with eating disorders, and it helped me address the bulimia that had dogged me since I was thirteen. One recovery program was enough, thank you very much. I'd finally decided to walk through the doors of the weird Swedish diner meeting when Liam, my boyfriend at the time, came home yet again from the bar and puked in the toilet, too blitzed to say his name, much less Goodnight, Christie , or I love you . Sex was most certainly out of the question. In those days, I spent my waking hours perseverating over the question of why Liam would pick a six-pack of Schlitz over hanging out with me, wonderful me, who was turning into an emotionally bankrupt shrew whose primary job was to tally how much he was drinking and how little we were fucking. I'd become an abacus: all I could do was count how much he drank and all the ways he disappointed me. The night before my first meeting at that Swedish diner, I'd decided there was no harm in checking out another twelve-step meeting. Meetings typically last sixty minutes, and I wasn't terribly busy with my secretarial day job and my nighttime job of waiting for Liam to tap into some desire for me. Maybe the people at this meeting could teach me how to get my beloved to stop drinking until he blacked out. At the time, I lived and worked on the South Side of Chicago, in Hyde Park, one hundred blocks away from the Swedish diner in Andersonville. The morning of the meeting, I woke up before six to shower, dress for work, and pack food for the day, because as soon as the meeting was over, I'd have to bolt to my Honda and book it one hundred blocks back to Hyde Park, where I worked as an administrative assistant to a prominent social sciences professor at the University of Chicago. My job entailed sending faxes, answering the phone, and tracking down my boss's speaking fees--tasks an average sixth grader could have executed. The boss wanted me there by 9:00 a.m. sharp in case the president called at 9:01 a.m. inviting him to discuss his research at an upcoming U.N. conference. When the diner meeting started, only five other people huddled around the table in the back corner. "Hi, I'm Meredith. Welcome. We're a small meeting," said a smartly dressed woman when she saw me looking around for more people. My recovery meetings for bulimia took place in hospitals and churches--solemn institutions that smelled like antibacterial soap, mold, or incense--where we sat in folding chairs or on lumpy couches. Meeting in public at a table beneath stenciled images of old-timey Swedish townspeople, I felt exposed. What if I burst into tears? What if a member of the public overheard me talking about my boyfriend's beer tab? What if someone I knew walked in for lingonberry pancakes before work? If Meredith hadn't spoken to me, I would have turned around and walked out. The person in charge, seated to the right of Meredith, had short, spiky brown hair and brick red lipstick. She introduced herself as Sherri and read from pages in a blue binder. At some point, she asked if there were any newcomers. I raised my hand and said my name. Around the table, each person said "Welcome" and smiled at me. My eyes filled with tears without my permission. These people--four women and one guy--were already paying more attention to me than Liam had over the past week. Underneath the table, I picked my cuticles, a terrible habit that left my skin tender and blood-streaked. I worried that after the meeting, one of these people would pull me aside and tell me I had to break up with him, or corner me and insist I stay. I blinked and blinked, trying to keep the tears from falling. Throughout the hour, I bobbed along the bottom of my pain, pining for the early, blissful days of my relationship with Liam when we dated long-distance: I had lived in D.C., he in Chicago. He wrote me a letter every single day, and during our monthly visits, we'd spend the weekend in bed, laughing, dozing, and getting to know each other. In our long-distance year, I rarely saw him drink, and never once saw him drunk. But since I'd moved to Chicago to be with him, he changed jobs and began working sixty-hour weeks at a consulting firm. The drinking surely relieved the pressure of his job, as well as the strain of my constant surveillance of his alcohol consumption. A few beers took the edge off my weekly reminders about how long it had been since he'd bothered to fuck me. I prayed one of the people who'd welcomed me to the meeting would tell me how to make the drinking stop. No one offered anything close to a quick tip; there were no hacks, only suggestions that we look at our own lives. Take the focus off the alcoholic , more than one person said, which I thought was dumb because my only problem was Liam's drinking. There were, of course, several items in my own life I was ignoring every time I fastened my laser focus on Liam's affinity for beverages in brown bottles, such as my dead-end job that didn't cover my mountain of student debt; my dusty-ass apartment that lacked central air and a single free inch of kitchen counter space; and my distant relationships with every other human being on the planet. I sure as hell couldn't see that this consuming "romance" with my boyfriend had crowded out my friendships. Every single friend had gone blurry in my peripheral vision. One minute they were there, and then: vanished. When I met Liam, I was part of a trio of friends in the same master's program in humanities at the University of Chicago. Amy, Saren, and I ate lunch together every day on campus, discussed the readings we did for our classes, planned dinner parties, and piled in Saren's car for shopping trips to the suburbs. We had inside jokes about our professors and the eccentric characters in our graduate program, like the woman who could not have a conversation without quoting Bertolt Brecht. We'd met each other's parents, and when we talked about the future beyond graduate school, we assumed our friendship would remain in the center of our lives. But when I started dating Liam right after graduation, I let the friendships wither, quickly and fatally. And it wasn't because I was too busy and blissed out from the hot sex to join my friends for Thursday-night must-see TV or sushi downtown. Liam was in our graduate program; we could have all hung out together. But I was threatened by Amy and Saren--I didn't drink and they did, so they were livelier and looser than I was. I couldn't have admitted it at the time, but I feared Liam would compare me to them and realize he'd mistakenly chosen the uptight teetotaler who liked to go to bed by nine thirty after spending the day battling low self-esteem and anxiety. They were a better match for him, especially Saren. She'd read every thing, drove a red Bronco, and wore trendy, belted outfits. She also had an impressive job lined up with a Chicago magazine. The one time we went out as a group, she and Liam had a long, heated conversation about Studs Turkel and postcapitalism poverty in Chicago. From their reddened cheeks and loud voices, I could tell they were buzzed, energized. They looked like they wanted to mash their lips together. My sole contribution to the forty-five-minute conversation was "I heard they're tearing down Cabrini-Green." To me, the vibe between them was unmistakable, but instead of having an honest conversation with them or asking Amy for a reality check, I withdrew from the friendships, backing Liam and myself into an isolated corner so no one could see how mismatched we were. I cut Amy and Saren out of my life with little remorse. I cared only about my faltering relationship with Liam. And it was a vicious cycle: I dumped my friends and became more isolated, which made me hold on to the unhealthy romance even tighter, because there was no else around. I lost my friends and myself, as Liam became the subject of most of my sentences. He's under so much pressure at work. He screamed at me the other night about a coffeepot that he left on. He likes to drink at the dive bar on Oakley. Maybe if I'd held on to the friendships, Amy and Saren could have helped me sort out my relationship. If I'd let them, they could have had a close-up view of what was happening to me and asked questions. Are you happy in this relationship? Is this working? Why are you holding on so tightly? They could have pointed out that I had no plan for the future and less than $30 in savings. They could have helped me find an apartment that didn't make me want to die in my sweaty sleep when the temperature rose above 85 degrees. If I'd had close friends, I would have turned to them instead of this random collection of people sitting at a diner talking about alcoholism. During the meeting, I watched Meredith. And I listened. She talked about her mother and her sister, and I tried to figure out which one drank too much. She leaned forward when she talked, making eye contact with everyone. In her three-minute share, she mentioned having a sponsor, working the steps, and surrendering to a Higher Power. The holy trifecta of recovery meetings. By the end, I sized her up as a wise elder. She slid out of the booth five minutes before the meeting ended. "Work meeting," she whispered to the woman sitting next to me. Her heels click-click-click ed against the diner's tiled floor. In Meredith, I didn't see a friend, a confidante, a sponsor, or a sister. I didn't have that kind of imagination. I saw a wise middle-aged woman who liked gold rings and spent her days at an important day job, where she wore blazers and managed a staff. I never dreamed we'd talk on the phone, cry on each other's shoulders, or become each other's family. I saw no common ground between her pain with her mother and sister and my devastation over my boyfriend's drinking. Anyway, I wasn't looking for friends. I had my hands full trying to get Liam to cork the bottle and pay attention to me. He was my first great love, and I couldn't bear the thought of living without him. If only I could get him sober, I'd have the perfect life. Excerpted from Bff: A Memoir of Friendship Lost and Found by Christie Tate All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

In her heartfelt memoir, Tate (Group: How One Therapist and a Circle of Strangers Saved My Life) reflects on the implosion of her past female friendships. When Tate overheard her married friends discussing motherhood at her wedding rehearsal dinner, she realized that her fiancé's proposal hadn't fixed her inability to stay close to other women. Tate recalls her turbulent history of making and losing friends: elementary school alliances were marked by the desire to fit in with the popular girls, while as a high schooler, Tate's friendship with homecoming queen Lia dissolved after she prioritized an alcoholic boyfriend. Tate's friendship woes followed her into adulthood: the "uneasy triangle" she formed with her friends Marnie and Emily reminded Tate of the fraught relationship between herself, her mom, and her sister, and she ghosted her running partner, Callie, after getting engaged. But the bond Tate forms with Meredith, an older woman whom she meets in a 12-step meeting, changes her perspective. Tate takes accountability for her actions ("I'm a work in progress"), and she captures the transformative power of friendship: "It feels like being known and cherished and held tightly." Readers will be moved by this outstanding portrait of self-excavation. Agent: Amy Williams, Williams Company. (Feb.)

Booklist Review

In close parallel to her debut, Group (2020), Tate's second memoir is another long look at a lifetime's work of healing relationships. Where Group focused on self and romantic attachment within a therapeutic circle under the leadership of Dr. Rosen, B.F.F. focuses on Tate's friendships with other women--whom she normally ghosts when problems arise--under the mentorship of Meredith, an older friend Tate met in eating-disorder recovery groups. Tate is shocked to learn she's not done with relational work after she gets engaged. Meredith's encouragement, after-meeting coffees, and vulnerable disclosures help Tate become a "good enough" friend who, after years, can feel more love and connection with friends rather than anger and jealousy. Both memoirs are unique in Tate's willingness to take a long, candid look in an objectively unflattering mirror: she was not a good friend for a long time. Written in three understandable, relatable parts--"What It Was Like," "What Happened," "What It's Like Now"--Tate's book shows readers how deep the work had to go for her to change.

Kirkus Book Review

A memoir about the author's lifelong struggle with female friendships. In this intensive yet refreshing self-analysis, Tate, the author of Group: How One Therapist and a Circle of Strangers Saved My Life, dissects the nature of her bonds with women. The author recalls ghosting most of her friends in Texas when she relocated to Chicago for college, then letting all of her graduate school friendships "wither, quickly and fatally," in favor of placating an alcoholic boyfriend. As Tate demonstrates, this legacy extends back to grade school, when she sacrificed bonds with girls for popularity and dating, all while dealing with low self-esteem, shame, and anxiety. Nearing 50, Tate reflects on a lifetime of friendships from which she had "withdrawn, drifted away, lost touch." She also let insecurities about her relationships with her mother and sister distort what could have developed into significant bonds with other women. Therapy sessions only helped so much, barely addressing Tate's internalized fears of female competition or jealousy or allowing her to disarm "the lie of my own unworthiness." In 1998, the author met older, wiser Meredith at a 12-step recovery program meeting in Chicago, and her future brightened. After Meredith coached her to perform the "emotional labor" necessary to confront her issues, they enjoyed an immensely rewarding friendship for over a decade, until Meredith's terminal cancer diagnosis. Tate's chatty exposition tends to blunt some of the heftier core points about the importance of unpacking one's psychological baggage and the value of establishing deeper interpersonal bonds. Nonetheless, after making cathartic amends to several of the people she ghosted along the way, the author clearly appreciates and respects the idea of female friendship and holds herself fully accountable for her mistakes. Readers will grasp the amount of work it takes to cultivate and preserve these kinds of bonds. A meaningful, memorable journey from inner pain to honest, open, and enduring friendship. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Christie Tate is the author of the New York Times bestseller Group , which was a Reese's Book Club selection. She has been published in The New York Times , The Washington Post , Chicago Tribune , McSweeney's Internet Tendency , and elsewhere, and she lives in Chicago with her family.

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