Best Friends

Best Friends by Martha Moody, published by Riverhead Books in 2001, is a reprint edition comprising 437 pages. This novel explores the unlikely friendship between two women, Clare Mann and Sally Rose, that spans two decades, beginning at Oberlin College in 1973. Clare, from a working-class Protestant family in Ohio, meets Sally, a wealthy and sheltered Jewish girl from Los Angeles. Their bond deepens as they navigate the complexities of life, including marriages, motherhood, and careers, while contrasting their vastly different backgrounds.
Readers will find a nuanced portrayal of friendship as Clare becomes increasingly intertwined with Sally’s family, particularly as she faces her own challenges as a doctor specializing in AIDS. The narrative delves into themes of personal growth and the impact of family secrets, particularly as Clare uncovers truths that could threaten her relationship with Sally. Moody’s debut captures the evolving dynamics of their friendship against the backdrop of life’s trials, making it a thoughtful exploration of connection and resilience.
Official synopsis Publisher
An unlikely friendship between women that spans two decades drives this unforgettable first novel. Oberlin College, 1973. Clare Mann, the daughter of a Protestant working-class family from Ohio, has never met anyone like her new roommate, Sally Rose. Wealthy, pretty, and Jewish, barely emancipated from her close-knit Los Angeles family, Sally has led a sheltered life. Still, she and the hard-working, jaded Clare form an extraordinary friendship that endures for years, through disastrous marriages, motherhood, and demanding careers on opposite coasts. Clare is fascinated by Sally’s calm probity, her family’s seeming perfection, the utter confidence and willful naivete that rule her personal life, while sheer ruthlessness governs her law practice. She comes to need Sally the way she has never needed anyone, and her trips to California provide respite from her own family difficulties and her growing responsibilities as a doctor specializing in AIDS. But as Clare grows closer to the Roses over the years, especially to Sally’s father, she stumbles upon a carefully guarded family secret that could alienate her from Sally forever. And when the death of Ben, Sally’s heroin-addicted younger brother, follows soon after the death of their mother, Clare is stunned to see this once-enviable and larger-than-life family reduced to human proportions. In this impressive debut, Martha Moody is pitch-perfect in her depiction of the subtle shifts of emotion and perspective that occur as people-and friendships-mature. Readers of Iris Rainer Dart’s Beaches and Elizabeth Strout’s Amy and Isabelle will delight in Best Friends.
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