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The Politics of Lonely

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Friendship is hard because everything is hard. This book examines social structures to demonstrate how people mend an unravelling social fabric.
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  • 10 September 2026
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Why is it hard to make and keep friends as an adult? Even if you finally find time to see each other, can you connect more deeply than just catching up over coffee? How many do you count as ride-or-die pals who’ll always show up with effervescent banter and deep conversation — your “chosen family?”

Widespread loneliness reflects a world of crappy jobs and unaffordable housing that makes it almost impossible to have close, interwoven friendships. A dwindling social safety net takes a toll on us and on our relationships. Particularly for queer people, friendships can be crucial relations of equality, constancy, and care. Still, we disappoint each other and fall into irreparable conflict.

A less lonely world is possible. Through interviews, research, and personal narrative, this book shows how people build tight connections despite living in the austere conditions of colonial capitalism — boldly weaving a new social fabric as this one unravels.

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Price: $22.00
Pages: 254
Publisher: Fernwood Publishing
Imprint: Fernwood Publishing
Publication Date: 10 September 2026
Trim Size: 7.00 X 5.00 in
ISBN: 9781773638263
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Friendship, FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / LGBTQ+, FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Chosen Family

Lee Arden is originally from Algonquin land in the Ottawa Valley, and now calls Montréal/Tiohtià:ke/Mooniyang home. They are the author of many zines, including PALS:
The Radical Possibilities of Friendship, Surprisingly OK: What Healing Trauma Feels Like, and the novella Summer Shade.

Lee founded and runs Sheer Spite Press, a small press and zine distributor focused on beautiful, affordable work by creators who face barriers such as transphobia, ableism, and poverty in their practice. They’re also a member of the organizing collective for Dick’s Lending Library, a community-run library in Montréal that specializes in the literary, political, and artistic work of trans, non-binary, and Two Spirit authors, and a past intern and forever collective member for the Queer Zine Archive Project. Lee is white, trans, an anarchist, a Quaker, and a deeply imperfect friend, but they try.

Preface: Friendship Is Worth the Struggle

Part 1: What Is Friendship?
- Do We Even Know What Friendship Is?
- Casual Sex, Serious Friendships, and Life Outside the Couple
- Weaving Networks of Friendship
- The Families We Choose

Part 2: Why Is Friendship So Hard?
- The Ideology of Coupledom
- Shredded Social Safety Nets
- Lonely, Expensive Homes
- Work, the Joy-Eater

Part 3: Towards a Friendlier World
- Divesting from Whiteness
- Investing in Shared Resources
- Organizing Together
- Planning Together
- Learning How (and Why) to Repair
- Building Community and Friendship across Difference
- Returning to Ritual, Celebration, and Grief

Conclusion: Imagining a New World as This One Crumbles