Imprint: Penguin
Published: 17/01/2013
ISBN: 9780241953839
Length: 304 Pages
Dimensions: 198mm x 18mm x 129mm
Weight: 213g
RRP: £8.99
Can We Still Be Friends is the debut novel by the editor of British Vogue, Alexandra Shulman.
Summer, 1983. Best friends, Sal, Annie and Kendra are fresh-faced and fresh out of university. Three very different girls about to walk three very different but equally tangled paths . . .
Sal's the aspiring journalist whose personal demons threaten to destroy everything she achieves. Annie's the domestic beauty, convinced that marriage will give her everything she wants. And Kendra, the daughter of chic, liberal parents, is searching for her an identity all of her own.
As they plunge headlong into the years of pixie boots and shoulder pads, Duran Duran and Margaret Thatcher, they find that for all their plans and hopes and dreams, nothing in life is certain - and that includes friendship.
'Exquisite time travel . . . Every detail - from fashion, design and music to social tribes and verbal tics - is spot on' Guardian
'Warm and entertaining . . . captures the excitement of being young and glamorous at a time when the sky really did seem to be the limit' The Times
'Wonderfully evokes that ping-pong between trivial and tremendous so characteristic of the Eighties . . . great on atmosphere . . . An engaging debut, alive with human sympathy' Wendy Holden, Daily Mail
Alexandra Shulman has edited British Vogue since 1992. She is a contributor to The Times, Daily Mail, Guardian and Daily Telegraph and lives in London. This is her first novel.
Imprint: Penguin
Published: 17/01/2013
ISBN: 9780241953839
Length: 304 Pages
Dimensions: 198mm x 18mm x 129mm
Weight: 213g
RRP: £8.99
Exquisite time travel . . . Every detail - from fashion, design and music to social tribes and verbal tics - is spot on
Wonderfully evokes that ping-pong between trivial and tremendous so characteristic of the Eighties . . . great on atmosphere . . . An engaging debut, alive with human sympathy
Engrossing . . . brilliantly captures the complexities of female friendship
A poignant look at the juggling act women must maintain if they're to carve out a career, and how friendships define life's tribulations
Warm and entertaining . . . captures the excitement of being young and glamorous at a time when the sky really did seem to be the limit
'Sapphic sex, shoulder pads and Spandau Ballet . . . Too seductive a storyline to wait for the inevitable film
Shulman's well-executed debut is committed to portraying life in all its contradictory, chaotic, celebratory form. A novel both full of heart and comfortable in its own skin
An impressive debut . . . the best-quality chick-lit available and a thoroughly enjoyable summer read
A fun summer read . . . a page-turner, making me nostalgic for a time when youthful female friendships had to be worked at, face to face over a bottle of wine and some nasty pink taramasalata, rather than simply maintained with a few mouse clicks and a "share" button
An enjoyable romp back to a more flamboyant time