What was your inspiration for Friends Who Move Couches?
Friends Who Move Couches is almost a memoir and is based on a severed friendship I experienced. When I admitted my “breakup” to others, I found most women have lost friendships over the years.
I decided to write a memoir; however, three chapters in, I realized how common and boring my suburban life had been. I decided to spice it up—mostly at the expense of my husband.
My husband and I have been faithful to each for many years, yet Nikki Grey’s husband (to spice it up) is cheating on her. While Nikki mourns her lost friendship, she’s unaware her marriage is slipping away.
Most of Nikki’s friends are true friends in my life. The main characters, Jody and Val, are childhood friends whose personalities are so interestingly opposite, I transplanted them from my childhood to my adult neighborhood. All other good (body-moving) friends are real except Evy and Ellie who are a culmination of all my friends.
One friend, Carol, helped me weather through my friendship losses and has become my best marketing tool. You can see her in my ads.
Do you find inspiration in your own life for your other writing?
All of my novels are somewhat inspired by my life but Friends Who Move Couches is the closest I can come to a memoir. Many scenes were inspired by true-life events. Because of this, I believe readers can relate to Nikki’s friendship and motherhood struggles.
Tell us about the book.
Nikki Grey's idea of living dangerously is not wearing a seatbelt, yet calamity always seems to find her.
Friends Who Move Couches is a laugh-out-loud yet insightful story about life, friendship, quieting your inner critic, and surviving rejection.
Married to a workaholic, mothering three rebellious kids, and feuding with neighborhood friends, Nikki Grey forgets her problems one afternoon by smoking marijuana. That blunder ignites a lifelong yet dormant medical condition, and she loses her driver’s license. Suddenly stranded in her home, she’s forced to stare out the window at women who have ostracized her.
Her true friends encourage her to concentrate on her health, but Nikki is her own nemesis. She embarks on a scheme to win back neighborhood friends and plunges into efforts that only end in muddying her reputation. She becomes the butt of neighborhood jokes.
Foolishly, her ache to mend her broken relationships escalates.
Not until her two-timing husband asks her a question that catapults her frivolous suburban life into a tailspin, is she forced to stop reaching for others and stand on her own
If you like novels like Three Wishes by Liane Moriarty, you’ll love following Nikki Grey’s hilarious journey in Friends Who Move Couches as she figures out…
Whom should she keep in her life and whom should she kick to the curb?