logo
Isn't It Nice We Both Hate the Same Things author Jessica Seaborn knew two people when she moved to Sydney, then they left

Isn't It Nice We Both Hate the Same Things author Jessica Seaborn knew two people when she moved to Sydney, then they left

The new novel Isn't it Nice We Both Hate the Same Things starts with a text message exchange that begins on March 7 between friends: "I haven't seen you in forever! We should catch up."
Before you know it, it's Christmas and the friends in question still haven't caught up.
Author Jessica Seaborn has been there.
"I do have a friend where we seem to only message each other for the milestones," Seaborn tells ABC News.
"So, she'll reach out and go 'I'm just letting you know we're expecting another baby' and 'just letting you know we've had our baby. This is her name' and she'll be like 'congratulations on your engagement', 'happy Christmas', 'happy birthday'.
"I looked at the text message history and it was just the milestones.
"And that is so sad, and maybe so true about some friendships.
Seaborn is the author of Perfect-ish, which was published by Penguin Random House in 2023.
That book underwent several name changes before Seaborn landed on the perfect, excuse the pun, title, whereas the title of her second novel has never changed.
"I was doing a lot of research into adult friendships," Seaborn says.
"I knew that that's what the book was going to explore, and I was researching a lot to form the plot.
"And when I was kind of trolling through the depths of searching terms like adult friendship or making new friends, someone had written a tweet like 'you know making new friends is just finding someone who hates the same things as you do' and someone kind of had replied and said 'isn't it nice when that happens' and so I just merged the two."
Seaborn was also inadvertently, she says, influenced by The Simpsons, where a similar phrase has made its way onto television.
Isn't it Nice We Both Hate the Same Things follows Charlie, who is in her early 30s and has always had a big group of friends, until she left her husband, and they all sided with him.
At the same time, she can feel her best friend Genevieve drifting away.
She embarks on a mission to find new friends, and in the process is forced to reckon with her own insecurities and assess whether she really wants to spend time with certain people.
"When I was doing research for the book, and I was researching friendship, they say there's usually two reasons that someone feels they need to make new friends," Seaborn says.
"One of them is when you move somewhere new, which is how I could relate to it, moving to Sydney [from Brisbane].
"The other one is ending a long-term relationship and losing all of your mutual friends.
"So, I brought both of those into the story."
When Seaborn moved to Sydney from Brisbane, she hardly knew anyone.
"My move to Sydney, when I was 21, I moved for a job and I knew two people … and they left not long after I arrived, so I really had no one except for housemates that I met on the internet and colleagues," Seaborn says.
"It took a while to form friendships.
"I really didn't have a lot of people, and it was quite a lonely experience and, I think, when I came out of COVID maybe, I felt it even more and I realised how much I had to make more of an effort to catch up with people.
"And I think it's just a universal and relatable experience and I think it's harder as you get older.
"I think you do have to put yourself out there and it's not necessarily a comfortable thing to do."
Isn't it Nice We Both Hate the Same Things also explores intergenerational friendships and friendships among family members. And it looks at what can happen when you test a friendship.
"I felt like there was really no reason to explore a story that really explored making more friends unless you have a moment where you really have to test the friendship," Seaborn says.
"And that moment is: if I really needed somebody, who would turn up?
"That's a question I ask myself a lot when I'm thinking about friendships or thinking about who I surround myself with.
Seaborn says people don't necessarily need a lot of friends, it's about the quality of those relationships that matter.
"For me, friendship is quality over quantity," Seaborn says.
"And I think it's important also as you get older to really keep putting yourself out there to meet new people and to make new friendships and I think you can meet people at different stages of your life that are just as important in your life.
"Sometimes all you need are a few great people around you and they may be family or they may be friends or they may be colleagues.
"But don't feel so alone if you've just got a few good people because that's still a great thing."
Isn't it Nice We Both Hate the Same Things by Jessica Seaborn is published by Penguin Random House.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New trainer Nacim Dilmi eyes debut winner as new Domeland chapter begins at Canterbury Park
New trainer Nacim Dilmi eyes debut winner as new Domeland chapter begins at Canterbury Park

News.com.au

time34 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

New trainer Nacim Dilmi eyes debut winner as new Domeland chapter begins at Canterbury Park

Ex-Godolphin assistant Nacim Dilmi will be eager to emulate a feat of his long-time boss James Cummings when he begins his first foray into training at Canterbury Park on Wednesday. 'James' first runner when he and Bart (Cummings) went into partnership was a winner, then when Bart passed away his first runner was a winner then his first runner at Godolphin was a winner,' Dilmi said. 'I spoke to James on Monday and told him I will try to do the same.' Dilmi is the latest Godolphin product to begin the next phase of his racing journey as new head trainer for Domeland on the Central Coast. The French-born horseman was announced as the replacement for Sara Ryan late last month and has moved to Wyong after several years heading up Godolphin's Melbourne operation. Domeland has 35 boxes at Wyong racecourse and a 260-acre Kulnura property that features a 3000m grass track. 'Sara has been here for a few years now and Tuesday was actually my second day,' Dilmi said. 'If the horses go well on Wednesday, I can't really take much credit because Sara has done most of the work with the horses. 'From what I've seen the horses are in good form and everyone in the stable has been helpful.' Dilmi's first runner as a trainer will be last start Tamworth winner Rebel Rhapsody ($21) in the Keeneland September Yearling Sale Benchmark 64 (1550m). How Much Better ($10) is in the Casino Prince @ Vinery Stud Benchmark 72 Handicap (1550m) while Aix En Provence ($11) contests the Asahi Super Dry Handicap (1900m). He won't have to wait long for a maiden Sydney Saturday runner with Irish import Salt Lake City poised to line up in Saturday's Premier's Cup Prelude (1800m) at Royal Randwick. 'It's a great opportunity and for me to be able to start with horses that are ready to go is handy, walking into a business that is already up and going,' Dilmi said. 'It makes it easier but at the same time I have to make it my own and the changes may take a few weeks. 'If we can adapt and make it a great start to the season, it will be make it better.' Dilmi's former employer Godolphin got their next chapter off to a winning start last weekend when classy mare Amusing scored for new trainer Chris Waller in what was their first runner for a public stable.

Claim to fame: Winning wave has Vitler riding high
Claim to fame: Winning wave has Vitler riding high

The Australian

time2 hours ago

  • The Australian

Claim to fame: Winning wave has Vitler riding high

Speaking to trainers in the know in southeast Queensland, 'confidence' is the buzz word when it comes to appraising rising apprentice Cobi Vitler. The 25-year-old Englishman is impressing the right people in the region and he's being rewarded with more rides in the city. Of course his 3kg claim helps, but Vitler is showing enough promise to suggest he will still be well in the mix for the better rides when his apprenticeship ends. Deagon trainer Jack Bruce heaped praise on Vitler after he patiently steered eight-year-old Galifianakis to victory in a Benchmark 78 (1600m) at Eagle Farm last Saturday. • PUNT LIKE A PRO: Become a Racenet iQ member and get expert tips – with fully transparent return on investment statistics – from Racenet's team of professional punters at our Pro Tips section. SUBSCRIBE NOW! And in an extraordinary sidenote, Vitler became the ninth different jockey to win on Galifianakis from nine victories since the gelding broke his maiden status in February 2023 at the Gold Coast, with Corey Bayliss onboard. Read: Stable switch: Exciting Queensland filly bound for Victoria 'He's riding really well, he's got confidence and he's being utilised by different trainers,' Bruce said about Vitler, who has been working in Australia for seven years under astute trainers such as Brett Cavanough in Scone and Lindsay Hatch in Toowoomba. 'I thought he rode Galifianakis confidently and patiently. He did a really good job. 'While he's got that good claim, it's particularly helpful. He first came on to my radar when he became an apprentice to Lindsay Hatch and started riding up here.' Vitler rode two winners on a Saturday meeting at Eagle Farm last month - Lead Me On for Chris Anderson and mare Wanda Rox for his mentor Hatch. 'He had to throw instructions out the gate when she was slow to go and he rode her good, I was very happy with him,' Hatch said about Vitler's effort on Wanda Rox. And then the critical word that all athletes need for success is mentioned again. 'He's riding with confidence and that helps,' Hatch added. 'When you ride winners, you ride with confidence. He's a good kid.' Read: Jockeys' reunion will get 'bigger and better' Vitler has six rides, all with different trainers, at a mid-week meeting at Doomben on Wednesday as demand for his services climbs. 'Like any apprentice, when they have a claim that makes them particularly valuable and often at that stage of their career when they're riding well and with confidence, they're certainly worth utilising,' Bruce said. 'For example Galifianakis at 63kg, I basically ran a Benchmark 85 horse in a 78 race and met at fairly level weights so that's the appeal of utilising his services. 'Obviously you take the risk that they'll make mistakes because they're learner drivers but if they don't (make errors) then you can run the horse six rungs below what it could've been racing.' Emily Lang is the undisputed queen of the Queensland apprentices but youngsters such as Cody Collis and 183cm-tall Corey Sutherland are making their marks, while Tasmania's Chloe Wells has joined Rob Heathcote's stable on a three-month loan. 'Like Emily Lang said this week, it's once you stop claiming that it gets hard but while you can claim you're very fashionable,' Bruce said. 'It's your opportunity to get out there and ride winners and learn what works and what doesn't. 'Cobi's got to use that opportunity to be valuable when he claims 2kg, then 1.5kg and eventually enough when he has to meet Ryan Maloney at level weights.' Horse Racing Astute trainer David Vandyke has picked out a Group 1 Victorian spring carnival goal for exciting mare Philia after she lit up the Queensland winter carnival. Horse Racing Private Harry has strengthened significantly for his spring carnival assault on The Everest where the unbeaten sprinter will wear a specially designed set of silks.

Cricket's bravest: Rick McCosker recalls Chris Woakes injured batting
Cricket's bravest: Rick McCosker recalls Chris Woakes injured batting

The Australian

time2 hours ago

  • The Australian

Cricket's bravest: Rick McCosker recalls Chris Woakes injured batting

McCosker was glued to his television in Newcastle and floated back in time. Back to 1977 when he walked out to bat at No 10 at the MCG against England in the Centenary Test with his jaw wired shut and crudely strapped after it was broken in the first innings by a Bob Willis bouncer. Woakes and McCosker, along with the likes of South African batsman Graeme Smith, Australia's Dean Jones and Nathan Lyon and England batsmen Eddie Paynter and Colin Cowdrey will share lifelong membership of cricket's Crazy Brave Club. It's for incapacitated batsmen who had no right to bat but somehow did. 'I was glued to the television and I guess you do think back a bit,'' McCosker told this masthead of Woakes effort to bat with a dislocated shoulder in the final Test against India even though he was not required to face a ball. 'Woakes' challenge was bigger than mine. At least I had my arms free. I could not run and was a bit restricted. My situation was easier than his was. All he could do was stand down the other end. I felt for him because there was so little he could do. 'I have a lot of respect for Woakes. He has been a good bowler for a long time. He did all he could do. What he did was fantastic.'' Just as Woakes told captain Ben Stokes there was no way he would not be batting, so was McCosker equally emphatic when approached in the MCG dressing room by Greg Chappell before his crucial 25. 'I remember I had being in hospital for a couple of days and I got back to the dressing room and Rod Marsh was getting close to a century and we needed more runs and I just decided I wanted to do my bit. Greg Chappell gave me the option and I said 'I want to do it. 'The bandage was ugly but I had to keep my upper and lower jaw together.'' It doesn't happen often but when a player volunteers to bat with a major injury it creates memories which are never forgotten. England star's heroic act as India claims thrilling Test win Cricket Burdened with bowling in the shadow of Jasprit Bumrah hasn't always been easy for Mohammed Siraj. But the hero of India's famous Test win at the Oval has never been short of self-belief. Cricket Chris Woakes has produced one of the most heroic acts in English cricket history, batting just days after he dislocated his shoulder against India. But his efforts weren't enough to save the fifth Test.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store