Who Needs Friends, Andrew McCarthy
Who Needs Friends, Andrew McCarthy
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Who Needs Friends
An Unscientific Examination of Male Friendship Across America

Bestseller

Author: Andrew McCarthy

Narrator: Andrew McCarthy

Unabridged: 7 hr 2 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 03/24/2026


Synopsis

A moving and provocative exploration of male friendship and loneliness, from New York Times bestselling author, filmmaker, and actor Andrew McCarthy as he crisscrosses the country to reconnect with his friends.
 
“You don’t really have any friends, do you, Dad?”  
 
A seemingly innocuous, if direct, question from Andrew McCarthy’s son left him reeling. McCarthy did have friends, but like so many other men, the necessities of modern adult life had forced his friendships to the background. At one point his friends had been instrumental in broadening his horizons, bolstering his courage, providing safe harbor. Now, McCarthy found himself questioning what had happened to those friendships, whether he needed them, what he valued, and what he had to offer. A simple question had become a moment that demanded a reckoning.  
 
Who Needs Friends charts McCarthy’s journey over nearly ten thousand miles behind the wheel, following him on often-unexpected travels through Appalachia, the Mississippi Delta, the Chihuahuan Desert, the Rocky Mountains with one driving purpose: to reconnect. Along the way he talks to countless men about their male friendships, from cowboys and blues musicians to preachers and rootless teens. What began as a simple desire to catch up with a few friends turned into a deep exploration of the challenges and rewards that men experience in forming bonds with each other.
 
In McCarthy’s own words, “It turns out that guys have a difficult time with friendship.” But that’s not the way it needs to be.
 
 

About Andrew McCarthy

Since starring in movies like Pretty in Pink, St Elmo’s Fire, and Less Than Zero, Andrew McCarthy has become a director, an award-winning travel writer, and a bestselling author. He has directed more than eighty hours of television, including Orange Is the New Black, The Blacklist, Gossip Girl, and many others. For a dozen years he served as editor at large at National Geographic Traveler and his award-winning travel writing has appeared in The New York Times, the Atlantic and TIME. He is the author of The Longest Way Home, Just Fly Away, and most recently a memoir, Brat, all New York Times bestsellers.


Reviews

Goodreads review by David on January 15, 2026

The title immediately got me hooked. I have found myself having conversations with people about friendships especially as adults. This book is part travelogue part look into different group of friends and the authors friendships himself. Overall an interesting and fun read! I received a free advanced......more

Goodreads review by Clare on March 25, 2026

I really enjoyed this! A thoughtful, engaging take on male loneliness that (refreshingly) focuses on solutions and conversation starting rather than blame. I really felt like I was alongside him during this journey getting to know new parts of the country.......more

Goodreads review by Jeff on March 26, 2026

Part Memoir. Part Travelogue. All Too Real. This is one of those books where even as McCarthy himself is traveling across the country to meet up with friends from much earlier in his life who he has lost contact with, I find myself reading it as a 43yo man and thinking of my own similar friendships.......more

Goodreads review by Gayle on March 29, 2026

Andrew McCarthy’s new book, Who Needs Friends: An Unscientific Examination Of Male Friendship Across America, is a travelogue of the author’s cross-country road trip to visit five close male friends with whom he has basically lost touch. He not only analyzes his relationships with these men – how th......more

Goodreads review by Penelope on February 28, 2026

I enjoyed this book. I like Andrew McCarthy a lot as an actor. I did actually watch his documentary, Brats, which felt fair but a bit self-indulgent. In this book, I truly appreciated the honest glimpse into male friendships, including the natural course of fading away that so many of these take, pa......more