Join Books.org — it's free

World Literature, Fiction Subjects
Best Friends by Thomas Berger β€” book cover

Best Friends

by Thomas Berger
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Roy Courtright is good-looking, healthy, independent, well liked, and the owner of a successful classic car dealership. His best friend, Sam Grandy, is the near inverse: married, a spendthrift, overweight, needy, and near bankruptcy. Yet they've been inseparable best friends since childhood. As best friends, they share a close and loving bond, often stronger than the relationships other men share with their girlfriends, siblings, even wives.

But in the twenty years since their friendship began, those fundamental differences have become more apparent and their relationship has grown strained. When the two friends encounter serious problems, they're forced to reckon with each other. Do these differences threaten their friendship -- or are the dissimilarities what make it possible? Can they escape the ties of their past, or are they intrinsically bound until death?

When Sam's health begins to falter, he draws Roy into his life again -- and into a chain of deceit, sex, delusion, death, and love such as only a best friend could. With exquisite wit and insidious wisdom, Best Friends weaves a powerful tale about friendship -- and the complex loyalties involved.

Synopsis

Roy Courtright is good-looking, healthy, independent, well liked, and the owner of a successful classic car dealership. His best friend, Sam Grandy, is the near inverse: married, a spendthrift, overweight, needy, and near bankruptcy. Yet they've been inseparable best friends since childhood. As best friends, they share a close and loving bond, often stronger than the relationships other men share with their girlfriends, siblings, even wives.

But in the twenty years since their friendship began, those fundamental differences have become more apparent and their relationship has grown strained. When the two friends encounter serious problems, they're forced to reckon with each other. Do these differences threaten their friendship -- or are the dissimilarities what make it possible? Can they escape the ties of their past, or are they intrinsically bound until death?

When Sam's health begins to falter, he draws Roy into his life again -- and into a chain of deceit, sex, delusion, death, and love such as only a best friend could. With exquisite wit and insidious wisdom, Best Friends weaves a powerful tale about friendship -- and the complex loyalties involved.

The Washington Post

You can read Best Friends as a love story or a suspense tale, as well as a meditation on friendship and fate; and if some of what takes place seems inevitable, it is, nonetheless, unsettling. Berger is a master of the unsettling narrative, the creepy visitor, the jovial stranger who seems capable of doing his worst and takes things just one step too far. — Jeffrey Frank

About the Author, Thomas Berger

Thomas Berger is the author of twenty-three novels. His previous novels include Best Friends, Meeting Evil, and The Feud, which was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. His Little Big Man is known throughout the world.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

The Washington Post

You can read Best Friends as a love story or a suspense tale, as well as a meditation on friendship and fate; and if some of what takes place seems inevitable, it is, nonetheless, unsettling. Berger is a master of the unsettling narrative, the creepy visitor, the jovial stranger who seems capable of doing his worst and takes things just one step too far. β€” Jeffrey Frank

The Los Angeles Times

Everybody knows that Thomas Berger wrote Little Big Man, a comic epic of the Old West that was made into a hit movie starring Dustin Hoffman. But not everybody knows that Berger has been turning out satisfying work for decades. β€” Michael Harris

The New York Times

Berger has paired the duels of sex with the wars of friendship. There is more than a hint in Best Friends of the ruthless and agile springs and traps in Choderlos de Laclos's great artifice, Les Liaisons Dangereuses. Here it is not the lovers who are entangled by them but, finally and lethally, Sam and Roy. β€” Richard Eder

Library Journal

Roy Courtright is a bit of an ascetic, a wealthy vintage auto dealer who stays fit, and something of a womanizer, although more romantic than rake. Sam Grandy is a vastly overweight spendthrift with a sleek banker wife named Kristin. Their lifelong friendship is tested when Sam's heart attack throws together Roy and Kristin, who asks Roy to stop bailing out Sam (he now wants $50,000). The relationship between this formerly standoffish pair heats up, and Sam's games and tricks cause the situation to deteriorate further, bringing up questions about how good his and Roy's "best friendship" was all along. The loyalties of all three characters take surprising turns, not always for the better. This novel manages without excessive plot, that overrated device that lets the Grishams of this world flourish; it even becomes a page-turner. Berger (Little Big Man) succeeds with characterization, detail, ethical complication, and nuance, and the result is outstanding. For all collections. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 1/03.]-Robert E. Brown, Minoa Lib., NY Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

This trim, mordant 22nd by the author forever identified with his classic Little Big Man (1964) is one more of the surprises that have cropped up throughout Berger's matchless 50-year career. It's another tale of urban personal and sexual conflict and misadventure, executed with the precision that distinguishes such deadpan black-comic masterpieces as Sneaky People, Neighbors, and The Houseguest. Berger's protagonist is Roy(alton) Courtwright, a mid-30s bachelor of independent means who also runs a vintage car dealership, and indulges "an enjoyable, relatively risk-free, and intentionally harmless way of life" that includes numerous friendly sexual conquests. Roy's opposite in every way is his longtime friend Sam Grandy, an obese couch potato who plays investment games on the Internet, while his many appetites (he's a collector, while Roy is a doer, and giver) are supported by his energetic wife Kristin, a bank manager who also finds time to whip up superb gourmet meals. The plot exfoliates smoothly from this simple premise, as Roy's affability brings him intimately close to Kristin when Sam is hospitalized with a heart attack. Then things get weird. The divorcΓ©e who's Roy's current lover is murdered by her suicidal ex. Coincidental acquaintances involve Roy awkwardly with a tough-broad nurse and an overeager coed, and bring him to the brink of liaisons with a policeman's hardworking wife and even Roy's matronly secretary Margaret Forsythe (who's actually the voice of his bewildered conscience). No other writer can build a symphony of seriocomic confusion with such a sure touch. Roy's innocently intended emotional and sexual vacillations are, magically, made bizarre, hilarious, andenormously moving. Berger's terrific plot takes several unforeseen and unsettling turns en route to its savage dΓ©nouement. And it's capped by an absolute killer of a final sentence. Nobody writes them like Thomas Berger. Not to be missed.

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2004
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Pages
224
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780743255844

More by Thomas Berger

Similar books