Other People's Fun
A Novel
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2.8 • 4 Ratings
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
A chance encounter draws two old classmates toward an unforgettable reckoning in this "very smart and darkly funny" novel exploring power—and how it tangles with privilege, marriage, motherhood, and midlife—from the acclaimed author of Alys, Always, and Her (Flynn Berry, author of Northern Spy).
"I look. I can’t stop looking. That’s the deal, isn’t it? We all know that’s how it works. If someone wants to be seen—and oh, how they want to be seen—then someone has to watch."
Ruth is alone, unnoticed, and at a loss: her marriage has ended, her daughter is leaving home, and her job is leading nowhere.
But luckily Sookie is back in her life–vivid, self-assured Sookie, who never spared the time for Ruth when they were teenagers, but who now seems to want to be friends. But as Ruth is caught up in Sookie’s life, she sees that everything is not as Instagrammable as Sookie would have you believe. As the truth about Sookie becomes clearer, so too does the choice Ruth will have to make.
Unputdownable, spiky, and subtle, Other People’s Fun is a novel about modern life, from the little lies we tell our neighbors, friends, families, and ourselves to the hall of mirrors that is social media. Filled with Harriet Lane’s trademark creeping unease and forensic observation, this page-turner considers how desperately we want others to see us as we are—and what happens when they finally do.
“Sharp. . . . A tale of toxic friendship, with a midlife mean-girl twist.” —New York Times Book Review
“This deliciously twisted tale is a one-sitting read steeped in tension and unease.” — Red Magazine (UK)
"Like an influencer’s feed, this is hard to look away from.” —Publishers Weekly
“If you loved Notes on a Scandal, then this is for you.” —Prima (UK)
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Lane (Her) offers a sharply observed psychological drama about friendship and the pitfalls of social media. Ruth lives alone after her husband left her and supports herself as a freelance translator. At her high school reunion, almost none of her classmates remember her except for Sookie, now a wealthy health and beauty writer, whom Ruth has been following for years online. As they catch up, Ruth feigns ignorance, afraid to embarrass herself by exposing her fixation on Sookie's success. The two strike up a relationship that looks like friendship, but which Lane shrouds in sinister undertones. Ruth swipes Sookie's designer sunglasses when she's not looking and seethes as Sookie prattles on about feeling adrift without ever asking Ruth about her own travails. As Ruth bitterly reflects, "This is the way it was when we were girls... some people need the light, others shrink from it." Still, she remains eager to please, so she lets Sookie use her apartment for trysts with a lover. A subplot about a sex abuse scandal at their old high school feels shoehorned in, but the narrative's rickety structure is made up for by the women's increasingly complex series of power plays. Like an influencer's feed, this is hard to look away from.
Customer Reviews
Nothing happens
All characters are annoying in this tedious book.