The Cave Dwellers
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3.0 • 2 Ratings
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- $18.99
Publisher Description
This “delicious take on the one percent in our nation’s capital” (Town & Country) and clever combination of The Bonfire of the Vanities and The Nest explores what Washington, DC’s high society members do behind the closed doors of their stately homes.
They are the families considered worthy of a listing in the exclusive Green Book—a discriminative diary created by the niece of Edith Roosevelt’s social secretary. Their aristocratic bloodlines are woven into the very fabric of Washington—generation after generation. Their old money and manner lurk through the cobblestone streets of Georgetown, Kalorama, and Capitol Hill. They only socialize within their inner circle, turning a blind eye to those who come and go on the political merry-go-round. These parents and their children live in gilded existences of power and privilege.
But what they have failed to understand is that the world is changing. And when the family of one of their own is held hostage and brutally murdered, everything about their legacy is called into question in this unputdownable novel that “combines social satire with moral outrage to offer a masterfully crafted, absorbing read that can simply entertain on one level and provoke reasoned discourse on another” (Booklist, starred review).
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
McDowell's mordant debut novel (following the memoir After Perfect) sends up the Washington, D.C., establishment. The torture and murder of Texas oil scion David Banks and his family sets off shock waves among teenage daughter Audrey's classmates and their families. Bunny Bartholomew's industrialist father is being sued for dumping chemicals, and her callous, blue-blooded mother wonders if the Banks murders were "divine intervention" after their new money made them social competitors with the Bartholomews. The son of an Army general who's under investigation for his role in alleged war crimes lets himself be waterboarded with champagne (and filmed) at a party, while elsewhere a senator chases off his daughter's Black boyfriend with a gun after catching them naked together, also captured on camera. Meanwhile, Bunny begins visiting the man charged with the murders, former Banks employee Anthony Tell, who is Black, claims his innocence, and is held without bail. As Bunny becomes overwhelmed by guilt about her white privilege, her effort to help Anthony and uncover the truth adds to the conflagration threatening to bring down all the families. While the drama is thick, the characters all hew closely to type (and to one another), with mothers bedecked in diamonds and Hermès scarves, and the fathers largely only distinguishable from one another by their professions and crimes. The flat characterizations don't make for high literature, but the satire cuts deep.