Gays Reading

Fredrik Backman (My Friends) feat. Erika J. Simpson, Guest Gay Reader

May 6, 2025
Join bestselling author Fredrik Backman, known for hits like A Man Called Ove, as he discusses the complexities of storytelling and his new book, My Friends. He reveals his unique approach to humor and the influences of his family on his creativity. Erika J. Simpson, a debut memoirist with an MFA in creative writing, shares insights from her work, This Is Your Mother, while pondering the pressures of theater school and the nostalgia of mixtapes. Both explore the transformative power of stories and the importance of connecting through literature.
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ANECDOTE

How He Became A Storyteller

  • Fredrik Backman describes making a living by sitting alone and talking to imaginary people and joking he could have sold cars if he liked real people.
  • He credits his wife with handling the business side after his 2017 burnout and says she runs reality while he runs imagination.
INSIGHT

Threat As A Running Theme

  • My Friends interweaves two timelines: one 25 years ago and one set in the present to explore youth under threat and adult consequences.
  • Backman emphasizes the book's emotional threat is the constant possibility of violence rather than graphic scenes.
INSIGHT

Adults Fail Teens, Creates Vulnerability

  • Backman opens My Friends with "Adults are the worst kind of humans" to signal his critique of adult failings.
  • He links that failure to how adults' shortcomings leave teenagers vulnerable and at the mercy of their environment.
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