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WORK TITLE: See Friendship
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WEBSITE: https://jeremygordon.xyz/about
CITY: Brooklyn
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COUNTRY: United States
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PERSONAL
Born in Chicago, IL; married Jen.
ADDRESS
CAREER
Writer and editor. Atlantic Monthly, senior editor. Has worked for The Outline, Pitchfork, and Spin.
WRITINGS
Contributor to numerous newspapers and magazines, including the New York Times, The Nation, Pitchfork, The Atlantic, and GQ.
SIDELIGHTS
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Jeremy Gordon is a writer and editor based in Brooklyn, NY. He has worked for several publications, including Pitchfork and Spin, and written for others, such as the New York Times, the Nation, and GQ. He is a senior editor at the Atlantic Monthly.
His debut novel, See Friendship, is set in Chicago, where Gordon was born and raised. Protagonist Jacob Goldberg is a writer in New York City, but the death of his friend Seth takes Jacob back to his hometown. His primary motivation is not to grieve, however, but to investigate how Seth died and then make a podcast about it, as Jacob believes that such a podcast will give his career the advantage it needs. During his investigation, Jacob interviews old friends and learns what Seth’s final months were like, even as he struggles with the ethics of making such a podcast.
Writing in the New York Times Book Review, Ryan Chapman stated that the book’s theme is “the millennial in crisis,” and Chapman appreciated how Jacob’s various interviews highlight that theme. Chapman called the novel “smart” and compared it to Nick Hornby’s High Fidelity. “A frequently funny meditation on memory and loss” was how a writer in Kirkus Reviews described See Friendship. This reviewer also especially appreciated the various interviews and what those reveal about millennial culture. A writer in Publishers Weekly praised Gordon’s “scathing and often funny prose” and suggested that fans of Sam Lipsyte “ought to take a look.”
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BIOCRIT
PERIODICALS
Kirkus Review, February 1, 2025, review of See Friendship.
New York Times Book Review, May 4, 2025, Ryan Chapman, “Memory Hole,” review of See Friendship, p. 21.
Publishers Weekly, January 13, 2025, review of See Friendship, pp. 41+.
ONLINE
Interview, https://www.interviewmagazine.com/ (March 4, 2025), Leah Abrams, author interview.
Jeremy Gordon website, https://jeremygordon.xyz (July 22, 2025).
Thank you for being a friend
December 13, 2020 I have a newsletter which is different from this blog, somehow, and over there I wrote about my favorite articles of 2020 and added some commentary. I like to have everything in one place, and after that, multiple places.
RIP The Outline
July 2, 2020 I have a new piece of writing up today at Columbia Journalism Review about The Outline, a website I continue to miss all the time because I keep coming up with ideas that are distinctly recognizable as "Outline pitches" yet do not have The Outline to publish them, a habit I'm sure I'll grow out of by 2021. This one was commissioned right after the site was shut down in early April, when the COVID-19 crisis was still new and the world had not erupted in protests, and went through a relatively slow editing process, which gave me a lot of time to think about the tone. There is, frankly, a more cynical version of this piece I could've written about the perils of VC-backed media and believing your own hype and the frivolities of media at large, which anyone is welcome to ask me about in person at a bar whenever we're all allowed to meet up with strangers (again, hopefully by 2021).
But to quote myself, blogging for The Outline a while back: "This is my blog." The truth is that I loved the site, and I loved working for the site, and while my job isn't my identity and death to all bosses and so on and so forth, I wanted to write something that would reflect the largely positive feelings I had about my time there. As of the time I write this (1:45 p.m., June 2, 2020) I've seen only one piece of negative feedback on Twitter, a media executive who posted it with the comment "sorry, but this is embarrassing." Well, so what? If I was worried about embarrassing myself I wouldn't have a Twitter.
I tried to be wary of glamorizing what we actually did: make a website that some people read. I could go on for another 2000 words or more about all the valuable things I picked up working for The Outline, and all the good work I think we did. But obviously, there is plenty the site didn't do perfectly — nothing so bad as journalistic malpractice, but there's certainly decisions that went awry, pieces I'd like to revise in retrospect, and some I'd like to strike altogether. To repeat myself again, we tried. Something about working for a publication is that you show up every day trying to bring to life the thing that's inside your head, and cross your fingers it comes through in the long run. All things considered, I think we did a fairly good job even if the site is dead.
A few years ago, a publication I liked a lot shut down, and received dozens/hundreds of those beatific tributes that make its employees feel better in the wake of its shuttering. That said, the publication was also just a website, not the salve for humanity's woes. At some point I noticed that its employees were prone to saying "Site X was a good site, not a great site" as a way to puncture all the romanticizing going on, which I thought was shrewd — a way of signaling that they hadn't bought into the hype, since I assume most writers would like to believe they're above the bullshit. I guess it's my turn now.
New blog
I used to have a Tumblr but no one is on Tumblr anymore, so from time to time I'll post here.
Jeremy Gordon on Media Jobs, Male
Loneliness, and Modern Malaise
By Leah Abrams
March 4, 2025
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Jeremy Gordon
Jeremy Gordon, photographed by Jarrod Turner.
Is there anything more embarrassing than starting a podcast? Maybe just promoting your own—rate, review, and subscribe to Limousine wherever you get your podcasts!—but I digress. In Jeremy Gordon’s excellent debut, See Friendship, cringe provides ample fodder for a satire of work and life in media right now. After years of writing and editing for culture publications like The Outline, Pitchfork, and Spin, Gordon has turned his talents to the form of the novel, chronicling the misadventures of Jacob Goldberg, a disaffected millennial media worker with a mild nicotine addiction trying to save his career by launching a podcast investigating the tragic death of a dazzling high school friend named Seth.
It’s not all a cynical ploy to make his name; Jacob really wants to know how his friend died so suddenly and so young. Was there foul play involved? And were they even as close as Jacob remembers, or does everything just glitter gold in memory? Along the way, he excavates the days of Julian Casablancas and Facebook albums with red Solo cups, taking stock of the false promises of the post-9/11 era and the hope-y, change-y years that followed. Try as he might to play the witty, detached punk or objective, responsible reporter, Jacob wears his heart on his sleeve, reconnecting with old flames and revisiting old assumptions in his quest to tell Seth’s story. Maybe, it turns out, the real podcast is the friends we make along the way.
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LEAH ABRAMS: First, I love the book. It’s so funny. I read it on my phone because I got a PDF, and I hate reading on my phone. But I was able to do it with your book because it almost felt like—you know when you get in a Wikipedia hole, reading the digital archive of a stranger’s life? So I wondered if you could share how you approached writing this book about the digital archive of our lives.
JEREMY GORDON: Well, I came of age, so to speak, when social media was just really taking off. I was in high school when Facebook started. I was in college when Twitter started. I used LiveJournal and Xanga as a teenager, and then sort of graduated to using Tumblr as a young adult. At some point, I turned around and sort of realized that I had informally chronicled a lot of what was going on in my life through these digital mediums. It was a lingua franca at the time. You had to adopt it. It’s not like it is today, where you don’t know a world without it. I remember being in high school and starting to use some of these platforms. They were a little janky, for lack of a better word. When I was starting to write the book, I was very conscious of the fact that familiarity with a digital world is second-hand nature to so many people in my generation and the younger generation. In particular, I was thinking about the so-called phenomenon of the “internet novel,” which can be quite wonderful, but goes into the very microscopic, granular nuances of how people use social media. What I was thinking about, in fact, was sort of the opposite thing: people’s relationship to the internet when they don’t think about it at all. There is an obsessiveness to it, the modern conception of being online. It’s not that I wasn’t interested in that, but I was really trying to capture someone who doesn’t think about it.
ABRAMS: In a lot of the so-called internet novels from the past few years, you go into a tunnel of the internet and memes, but your book is almost the opposite. The internet funnels the reader out into the rest of the world. I thought that was really well-done.
GORDON: Thank you.
ABRAMS: The book’s in first-person, which plays a part. It’s easy to fall into navel-gazing territory, but you take it in a much more expansive direction.
GORDON: Yeah, I often enjoy novels where you’re charmed by the voice of the narrator and yet you have reason to doubt him. I think my protagonist is a funny, charming guy, or at least he presents that way. He seemingly has these deep thoughts, but he’s also fallible. It’s not a coincidence that throughout most of the novel, he’s just sucking on a vape pen. This guy is just kind of obsessed with his thoughts, and that is certainly something about a writer who is friends with other writers, many of whom are on social media. It’s very easy to fall in love with your own thoughts.
ABRAMS: 100%. You brought up the narrator’s fallibility, and without giving any spoilers, this is a book that’s very much about substance abuse. It plays a role in the narrator’s personal journey—whether he acknowledges it or not. How do you approach writing about substances, and how did they play into your characterizations of different people?
GORDON: Well, similarly, I’ve known many people who’ve had different relationships to substances in a very casual manner. Something that’s difficult to articulate when you’re a teenager and young adult is, you don’t know when you have a relationship to substances. It’s sort of couched in the language of going out and having a good time. I think sometimes you need the distance of not being inside of the thing to realize that you were, in fact, inside of the thing. I never want to be judgmental of how someone spends their time, but that sort of informed some of these characters and their casual relationships to drugs.
ABRAMS: Absolutely. One of the other things I really loved about the novel is the way it speaks to the male urge to start a podcast. Here’s this protagonist who’s struggling to find connection, but also has a lot of really rich friendships. And when he reaches out, he’s met with support and love.
GORDON: Well, it’s funny, ‘cause at the start I didn’t think I was writing about friendship, which is ironic given the title of the novel and where it ultimately goes. I was just thinking about people in my life who meant a lot to me. I’ve been very fortunate to have some very strong male friendships with people who encourage a sense of openness. I think simply being honest about where you are is half the battle in terms of the so-called male loneliness crisis. And believe me, I’ve had plenty of male friends with whom it is a thinly veiled competition, as opposed to a more charitable exchange of ideas.
ABRAMS: There are examples of both in the book, but I especially love the ones that are genuine relationships. That brings me to Seth, a character who makes up the heart of the book and is the impetus for the protagonist to start the podcast in the first place. Could you talk more about how you came to that?
GORDON: It’s crucial that Jacob meets Seth when he is a freshman because Jacob looks up to Seth as someone who has everything figured out and knows the lay of the land—which is, in fact, the tragedy of their relationship. He has a very partial view of what is ailing his friend. There’s a whole world that he’s just not privy to, whether that’s because their relationship isn’t that close or they’re not good at talking about these things. You’re at this age when you don’t have as many experiences, and even just one positive interaction could literally change the trajectory of your life. Sometimes it takes the distance, the literal passage of time, to be aware that it’s almost a miracle you interacted with this person. But you also try not to write about them in a gauzy way because the flip side of that is, it’s very sad to only see the part of someone’s identity that they’re comfortable showing you. There’s a tragedy in being repressed or secretive, to not have the luxury of self-expression.
ABRAMS: One of the things that really draws them to one another is being biracial. I wanted to hear a little bit more about why that came through for you for these two characters and how you approach writing about identity more broadly.
GORDON: Well, it’s true that there’s so much media about being biracial that is extremely corny and extremely uncool and very literal. Being biracial myself was not something that I interrogated too deeply until I was older. I certainly had experience existing in two worlds—as I say it, it is very hard to avoid the cliché of “one foot in one world, one foot in the other world.” I thought about the casual way of writing about it—acknowledging it but not lingering on it too much. The book is set in Chicago, where I was very lucky to have an upbringing that was a truly diverse environment, racially and socioeconomically. It wasn’t really remarked upon, it was just kind of a fact of life, particularly when it came to racial identity.
ABRAMS: Perfect segue to Chicago, which is the hometown of all of our main cast of characters. Why did you decide to set it in your own hometown?
GORDON: To me, it felt like a place where the problem certainly hadn’t been solved, but there was a sense of the hope and change of the Obama era. I went to a high school that was, racially speaking, 30% of everything, and everyone more or less got along. There was a sense that this is what a multiracial city governed by progressive social politics could look like. Then you get a little bit older and you realize it’s not. But everyone I know who’s from Chicago fucking loves it, and it’s not because they love the Bears or The Wieners Circle. I think it’s because they had the wonderful experience of growing up in a cultured city that was not governed by status or social positioning. Of course, I’m saying this with a lot of fondness, but I do think it is true that there was something idyllic about the upbringing I had but which now seems so very far away. I saw it as the breeding ground for a lot of my ideas, particularly how these characters move through the world. They’re very comfortable being in a room with people of all stripes, and I’m very grateful for it. When it came to recreating how Chicago felt in that era, a lot of it came back to me the minute I needed to think about it. We’re now able to easily recapture things by going on Facebook to remember how people were dressed or the bands from that period that you can just queue up instantly.
ABRAMS: Obviously, the process of writing a novel is very different from your day job as an editor. How did you take off the journalist hat and start writing fiction?
GORDON: This will sound very stupid, but I’m a long time fan of books, and my reading diet has never been particular, one way or the other. I got into journalism almost off of a whim. I had done it in high school, and then I applied to journalism school, not because I was obsessed with being a great journalist but because it was just the most relevant major of the school that I got into. I knew I wanted to write, but I wasn’t particular about the format. There was a moment where I thought I wanted to write comic books, god forbid. Writing fiction was always in the back of my head, and I think I believed that one day I would have read enough books to be able to do it myself. Then I just woke up and was like…
ABRAMS: “Today’s the day.”
GORDON: It was like, “There will never be a moment in which I am somehow totally perfectly prepared. You just have to do it.” The moment I started to do it, everything flowed. But I had other attempts at novels. I would write tremendous chunks of something and then one day I would wake up and be like, “I don’t like the way this sounds, it doesn’t feel honest to me. I feel like I’m kind of putting on a voice. I’m trying to mimic George Saunders or Don DeLillo or whoever it is.”
ABRAMS: Many such cases.
GORDON: Then I was kind of in the midst of a professional crisis, so to speak, which is not exactly like the one that Jacob has. I was wondering what the future was going to look like. Journalism is not a stable business. I’ve known so many people who just stop doing it because the conditions are impossible. For a moment—and this still may come to pass—I was very much thinking that this could be it. When I started writing down these feelings and thoughts, I kind of had this breakthrough like, “Oh, this is the tone.” I locked in on something, which then took many different shapes and revisions and smudgings until it became See Friendship.
ABRAMS: There’s a nice parallel in that Jacob is also like, “What the fuck am I supposed to do to keep existing in media?” Was it important to you to include some commentary on what it’s like to work in this instability?
GORDON: Well, I imagine this is similar in a lot of creative fields, but almost everyone I know begins to over-identify with their job. It sounds so quaint, now that these businesses like VICE and BuzzFeed are all but done, but there was a sense when I was coming out of college that you could work for a cool place and you would meet cool people. It didn’t matter that you were only making $35,000 a year because you got to go to parties and hang out with people. Then, all of a sudden, all of these jobs stopped existing, and a lot of people realized that this job had become the basis for their identity. That’s a destabilizing thing, to come out of that into a world in which that just doesn’t exist anymore. I mean, what is a cool, digital-oriented publication that a young person of sound mind would think to themselves, “I’m putting my whole ego and identity into this”?
ABRAMS: Have you heard of Truth Social?
GORDON: Exactly. In the wake of him becoming president for the first time I and certainly a lot of people I know felt a sense of humility and shame because they thought the world could be one way and it’s really another. It’s very “millennial cringe,” as they say. But when you’re inside of something, it feels feasible. As time goes on, it feels not only implausible, but totally fucking foolish that you could have ever thought that. But then, what do you do as you go forward? What do you do when you have to find some new identity? In these moments of transitions, that failed middle class of the millennial generation was certainly on my mind. There is a character in the book who sort of realizes that the career she’s living is bullshit, and it’s not like someone who worked at a factory for 50 years that retires them. It’s people who just spent their twenties and some of their early thirties in a situation that collapsed instantaneously or almost overnight.
ABRAMS: It’s like, “I didn’t imagine I could buy a house, but at least I thought I could keep working at VICE.”
GORDON: I genuinely did not think that all these companies would just blow up.
ABRAMS: Well, your novel contends with the harsh realities of being a millennial. without falling prey to the kind of sardonic, detached voice that can be just as exhausting as blind optimism, frankly. You settle at a place in the book that is both true to these political realities, but also hopeful. What do you make of autofiction, and do you reject that label for this book?
GORDON: I would reject it, not because there’s anything wrong with it. I love autofiction. I love Karl Ove [Knausgård]. I love Sheila [Heti]. That said, I’m very genre agnostic. The classification is just not interesting to me. So while there’s unavoidable similarities to Jacob’s life and mine, the book is strongly fictional. But because there are these real world parallels, I would be a fool and a liar to claim that it wasn’t inspired by real things. I am a biracial Chicagoan who works in media and likes indie rock and has opinions about podcasts. At the same time, it is a character—a version of me who’s more of a shithead.
ABRAMS: I think that’s a beautiful place to end.
Gordon, Jeremy SEE FRIENDSHIP Harper Perennial/HarperCollins (Fiction None) $17.99 3, 4 ISBN: 9780063375093
A reporter's investigation into the death of a friend turns existential in this debut novel.
Jacob Goldberg, a "writer for a moderately respected website," believes that the key to his continued employment will be a podcast about the tragic death of his high school friend Seth Terry. While he'd always believed Seth was killed by some kind of stomach problem, Jacob is shocked to learn a decade later that Seth had in fact died of a heroin overdose, and that a high school acquaintance had sold him the fatal dose. The novel operates on dual tracks. The first and more interesting thread follows the interviews that Jacob conducts with old friends, forming an outline of Seth's life through the character studies of others. To get a clearer picture of Seth, a "cherubic wisp of indeterminate racial origin with floppy hair and skinny jeans," Jacob must interview grown-up punks, former drug users, and a Raytheon employee. The weaker thread follows Jacob's internal conflict over transforming his friend's life and death into digital content. Jacob tells himself that the story could "elevate [his] own thoughts and feelings and experiences into something that matters to strangers," but he increasingly comes to feel that his approach might be "callous." He's also turned off by the mercenary approach of podcasting. "It's still a really gripping story," an editor says. "Does it matter if it isn't totally true?" What keeps the novel tense is Jacob's attempts to contact Lee, Seth's drug dealer. Explored throughout are millennial culture, indie rock, and "the psychically fallow Bush years." Totally of their time, these characters spend a lot of time smoking weed pens, playing video games, and posting on social media.
A frequently funny meditation on memory and loss.
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2025 Kirkus Media LLC
http://www.kirkusreviews.com/
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"Gordon, Jeremy: SEE FRIENDSHIP." Kirkus Reviews, 1 Feb. 2025. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A825128257/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=bookmark-ITOF&xid=03b4c4dc. Accessed 30 June 2025.
In Jeremy Gordon's novel, ''See Friendship,'' a journalist reinvestigates his past, only to discover the story he was told about his friend's death wasn't true.
SEE FRIENDSHIP, by Jeremy Gordon
In the decade since the hit show ''Serial'' turned the name ''Adnan'' into a dinner-party mononym, a new protagonist archetype has emerged: the podcaster. Often these narrators play amateur detectives pursuing true-crime cases involving violence against young women (''I Have Some Questions for You,'' by Rebecca Makkai, and ''Sadie,'' by Courtney Summers). Other times, the narrator's pulled into manosphere buffoonery (''Friend of the Pod,'' by Sam Lipsyte). Now we have Jeremy Gordon's debut novel, ''See Friendship,'' whose reluctant podcaster is adrift and full of anxiety.
The novel is at heart a millennial's take on grief-inflected nostalgia. It follows Jacob Goldberg, a 31-year-old Jewish-Chinese journalist working at a ''moderately respected'' culture website. He's spent a decade churning out essays on exhibitions at the Whitney and pop icons' surprise albums. For his next venture for the publication, Jacob pitches a podcast series about a close high school friend, Seth, who died unexpectedly the year after Jacob graduated.
Seth was the Jay Gatsby to Jacob's Nick Carraway. ''There wasn't a single person at our high school he didn't get along with, and he could expand this invitational aura to include anyone,'' Jacob recalls. Seth was also Black-Brazilian and gay; he and Jacob bonded as two biracial students at the predominantly white Gale Sayers Prep, just outside Chicago (one of the most segregated cities in the United States).
As much as Jacob loved Seth, the podcast is not a passion project. Jacob sees job security in pivoting to the ad-friendly audio format, and though he knows that one dead friend is a tough anchor to sustain an entire series, he figures he can pad out the episodes with 9/11, the George W. Bush administration and other aughts-era signifiers. Despite his boss's ambivalent response, Jacob proceeds apace, collecting the details he thinks he'll need to produce a show.
We might pause here. Reading about someone else's podcast research is on par with a friend sharing last night's dream: If we're not in it, don't bother. But ''See Friendship'' holds our interest by sending Jacob on a spree of interviews with his former classmates, in Chicago and Los Angeles, that revises his memories of his late friend's final months. He documents romantic fumblings, overambitious theater productions and a skirmish at Seth's funeral. He also hooks us with a plot twist: It turns out Seth didn't die from a vague stomach condition, as Jacob believed, but from a heroin overdose. And a much-despised local musician named Lee Finch is somehow responsible. Jacob decides confronting Lee will provide a satisfying climax for the podcast and long-awaited closure for himself.
It would all make for a tidy story (for both podcast and novel), but Gordon -- who is an editor at The Atlantic, with bylines at Pitchfork, GQ and The New York Times Magazine -- rejects tidiness. Jacob isn't a terribly good journalist. He misses obvious clues and ignores the smoking gun of a related school scandal. The novel opens with Jacob's job anxieties, but even those fade into the background. And while another novelist might stress Jacob's Jewish-Chinese identity, Gordon only lightly touches it.
His real interest is the millennial in crisis -- cue the Strokes' ''Is This It'' -- and the ways Jacob glances backward. If every generation thinks it invented sex, Gordon's insight is that, thanks to technology, every generation does reinvent nostalgia. That's hinted at with the book's title: ''See Friendship'' is also the name of the Facebook tool for isolating the digital exchanges between oneself and a friend. It's a fitting metaphor. Facebook's feature delivers a seemingly complete record, but like all portraits, it's still partial. Jacob looks, he learns, but something will always elude him.
As the novel progresses, the true source of Jacob's renewed obsession with Seth comes to light. Jacob has recently suffered a mental breakdown. He's now floating along, unmoored. Seth is part of a larger siren's call toward the past -- Jacob hopes that by dwelling in memory, he might find a way out of his present.
The self-sabotaging fixation on nostalgia reminded me of ''High Fidelity,'' Nick Hornby's Gen X cri de coeur. Hornby's narrator, Rob, looked to the past for evidence; Gordon's proffers revisions and palimpsests. ''In searching for the answer, all I'd found were the limitations of my ability to understand,'' Jacob says.
It isn't a spoiler to reveal that the novel resists traditional resolution. The podcast's success is ultimately a secondary concern; Jacob never ''rediscovers'' Seth in the way he initially set out to; and ''See Friendship'' rejects catharsis in favor of the diffuse grays of extended mourning. Jacob, per Dickinson, will ''go on aching still/Through Centuries of Nerve.''
The final chapter decenters Jacob in order to unfold outward -- wonderfully so, like its own small metaphor of the internet. Gordon's smart novel on the warping effects of nostalgia and technology asks us to follow some Forsterian advice from a century ago: Only connect.
SEE FRIENDSHIP | By Jeremy Gordon | Harper Perennial | 280 pp. | Paperback, $17.99
Ryan Chapman's most recent novel is The Audacity, which is just out in paperback.
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This article appeared in print on page BR21.
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2025 The New York Times Company
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Chapman, Ryan. "Memory Hole." The New York Times Book Review, 4 May 2025, p. 21. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A838281325/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=bookmark-ITOF&xid=1b3013cf. Accessed 30 June 2025.
See Friendship
Jeremy Gordon. Harper Perennial, $17.99 trade paper (288p)
ISBN 978-0-06337-509-3
The narrator of Gordon's acerbic if exhausting debut reflects on people in his life who died young and his tenuous connections with former high school friends. Jacob, a 30-something magazine writer in New York City, hopes to get a raise and a promotion by starting a podcast. He heads to Los Angeles, where he meets with Kelsey, a classmate from his Chicago prep school. From Kelsey, Jacob learns that Seth, a gay Black man he was friends with, died from a heroin overdose a year after graduation, not from an ulcer as Jacob was originally told. Thinking the subject will appeal to his editors, Jacob successfully pitches a podcast about the mysterious circumstances behind the death, and the project morphs into more than he'd bargained for when he interviews classmate Lee, an indie rocker who might have sold Seth the heroin. Gordon's scathing and often funny prose (the "fucked" state of America "added up, and it added up, and it added up until one actually could not believe how much it was adding up") mostly makes up for his protagonist's stifling self-absorption. Fans of Sam Lipsyte's Homeland ought to take a look. Agent: Eloy Bleifuss, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (Mar.)
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2025 PWxyz, LLC
http://www.publishersweekly.com/
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"See Friendship." Publishers Weekly, vol. 272, no. 2, 13 Jan. 2025, pp. 41+. Gale General OneFile, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A828299876/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=bookmark-ITOF&xid=c35fd79b. Accessed 30 June 2025.