
The perfect vehicle for Rooney to explore this fear of relationship impermanence is polyamory, but more specifically, people doing polyamory incredibly messily. Perhaps that is why so many of her leads are obsessed with childhood romances continuing in a loop, always evolving but never ending. Inevitably, they begin an affair.Īnd Rooney, it’s clear, makes all her characters terrified of the same thing. When 37-year-old posh, famous British writer Melissa meets Bobbi and Frances at one of their spoken word events, she pulls them into her glamorous, decidedly grown-up life with whom Frances initially calls her “trophy husband.” The trophy in question is 33-year-old Nick, a handsome and quiet actor who immediately becomes drawn to Frances, whose crush on him is all-encompassing.

Also 21, Bobbi has been Frances’ artistic “muse” since secondary school, when they dated for some time before Bobbi-apparently with no explanation-ended it. The story revolves around 21-year-old Frances (newcomer Alison Oliver), a student at Trinity College Dublin who performs spoken word poetry with her ex-girlfriend and current best friend, Bobbi ( American Honey’s Sasha Lane). The Hulu adaptation, which premieres on May 15, doesn’t do justice to the novel’s more cerebral musings about imposed monogamy and capitalism, but it does capture that quintessential Rooney longing that defines her work. As far as plot, Rooney’s subsequent novels, Normal People and Beautiful World, Where Are You, pale in comparison to the layers and tension that she achieved with Conversations with Friends.


Conversations with Friends, Sally Rooney’s 2017 debut novel, is possibly the Irish author’s best, most emotionally complex work.
