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The Myth Of You And Me (2006)

The Myth of You and Me (2006)

Book Info

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Genre
Rating
3.66 of 5 Votes: 1
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ISBN
1400098076 (ISBN13: 9781400098071)
Language
English
Publisher
broadway books

About book The Myth Of You And Me (2006)

I loved this book from the beginning, and I loved it all the way through to the end. I could relate to it perfectly well - partly because I have always been the kind of girl to have pretty intensely strong female friendships and partly because I have seen first-hand how tenuous those friendships can actually be. Here's my favorite passage.***Adult friendship doesn't grant you an exclusive, isn't meant to be ranked above romance and family. I couldn't imagine ever living that moment again, when you say, with a shy and hopeful pride, "You're my best friend." The other person says it back and, there, you have chosen each other, out of everyone in the world. You have fallen in love and said so.The teenagers looked nothing like Sonia and I had looked at their age. We had big hair - one of these girls had dyed hers blue. We wore Coke shirts and Swatches and acid-washed jeans. We said "fixin' to" and "dang", hung out with Southern Baptists, dated boys who drove pickup trucks. These girls probably snuck into rock clubs. They did drugs and went to poetry readings. They knew all about Zen Buddhism and read articles in The New Yorker. What I recognized was the way they kept looking at each other even though they were each talking to a boy. Every so often, they exchanged these quick, knowing glances, each making sure the other one was still there, still with her. I wondered how long their friendship would last, and I felt sorry for them, because they didn't know it wouldn't.***This passage was so real, so true for me that I could have written it myself (er, presuming that I could write as eloquently as Ms. Stewart, that is). It made me sad for the friendships that I've lost, and made me glad for those that I've managed to retain, even though they are now different as they've had to adjust to fit the adult world - and that's really how the whole book made me feel. As the title of the book notes, lost friendships can begin over time to feel as though they never were as you once remembered them - they were merely myths in your shared past.For the transition of my own once-friends-turned-mythical, I am sorry. For my friendships that have made it through our crossing into the adult world, I am grateful. And I'm grateful to Leah Stewart for putting it all into words as poignantly as she did.

I'm not sure where I heard about this book from, whether it was a blog, podcast or newsletter, but I'm sure glad I read it! This was a wonderful story, an original story that is very well told. This story is of two girls, childhood friends through college, until a tragedy happens that effects them both so much they aren't friends anymore. Shoot forward a number of years and they are reunited in the most puzzled, maze-like way that draws the reader in to the point they don't want to put the book down for fear that they will miss something. Everything from the storyline, to the characters and their insecurities (I love reading about the insecurities with Cameron's height and Sonia's issue with numbers, they aren't like any I have read before) was a joy to read about, easy to feel their frustration or sadness. I haven't read anything else by Leah Stewart, but judging from this novel I will definitely be looking for more of her work. Lying deep in this story is a moral so deep you almost want to read it again so you can look at the plot from a completely different angle. I recommend this one for sure, I really enjoyed my reading experience with this one. :)

Do You like book The Myth Of You And Me (2006)?

This was indeed one of those books that seemed to have been spying on my life. I found many moments of truth and I really, really identified with narrator, Cameron. The nature of female friendships is so complex, and I've never before read a book that tackles this particular subject, and so well.Some favorite quotes are below. See Tamara and Jenn's reviews for more."With moving, I have always been partial to the in-between, the blurred highway outside the window, that suspended time when everything you were lies behind you like a molted skin, and everything you might become shimmers at the horizon. You might choose anything and make it happen, constrained by nothing but your own imagination, sure that not even gravity can hold you." p. 77"So Sonia was not my only, or even my first, best friend. She was the last. It wasn't that I hadn't made friends since, just that I thought myself past the age of that particular kind of friendship. Adult friendship doesn't grant you an exclusive, isn't meant to be ranked above romance and family. I couldn't imagine ever living that moment again, when you say, with a shy and hopeful pride, 'You're my best friend.' The other person says it back and, there, you have chosen each other, out of everyone else in the world." p. 114"Nothing is stranger than the familiar become unfamiliar. A house on your street that you never stopped to see before, so that it seems to have been dropped into place with its rosebushes, its bicycles in the yard, like a fairy cottage appearing from the mist. A birthmark on your back that you never noticed in twenty-five years of looking at your own skin. Why, you don't know anything, do you? The world can crack open like an egg, spill fires into forests, rivers into streets." p. 126"Strange how uneasy I was at the thought of actually getting what I wanted. Maybe I was afraid of exchanging desire for disillusionment." p. 184"Here was the secret of this house, the thing it took bravery to face -- that to go on loving someone means to over and over allow the necessary pain." p. 272
—Rebecca

This was a book I kinda blew off to-do stuff to read. Laundry went unfolded, dishes sat undone, and I didn't care. I just wanted to read it. It resonated with me since I also had a best friend for many years who I no longer am frenz with. Although it was not for the same reason, the way the story wended its way from past to present made me think of this long lost friend, and how when your childhood memories are inextricably woven with another person, especially when that person has exited your life, leaves you missing a little bit of yourself. I can see how one might come to believe it could all be just myth, or wisps of smoke floating through your memory, never quite finding their moorings. Leah did a great job - multidimensional, strongly built characters, and overall a solid thumbs up from me.
—Amber

I have to say I wasn't sure how I felt about this book while I was reading it. I never really felt much for the main character. Maybe we aren't suppose to really like her. She shut herself off from so many people, even her own parents, only allowing in a person here and there. And I found her to be really gloomy even when the moment didn't warrant it. I also think aspects of Cameron's journey to find Sonia were interesting but some of it seemed too easy. All the people in Sonia's life seemed a little to free with information about her even allowing Cameron to look through her office. It was just weird to me. Not that it wasn't sometimes a compelling read, often it crossed over to being a little too far fetched for me. I guess I was hoping for a little more depth from all the characters. I liked the book on a whole though and wouldn't discourage anyone from reading it.
—Jennifer

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