



The Guest
A Novel
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3.1 • 61 Ratings
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- $13.99
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- $13.99
Publisher Description
A young woman pretends to be someone she isn’t in this “spellbinding” (Vogue), “smoldering” (The Washington Post) novel by the New York Times bestselling author of The Girls.
“Under Cline’s command, every sentence as sharp as a scalpel, a woman toeing the line between welcome and unwelcome guest becomes a fully destabilizing force.”—The New York Times
“Alex drained her wineglass, then her water glass. The ocean looked calm, a black darker than the sky. A ripple of anxiety made her palms go damp. It seemed suddenly very tenuous to believe that anything would stay hidden, that she could successfully pass from one world to another.”
Summer is coming to a close on the East End of Long Island, and Alex is no longer welcome.
A misstep at a dinner party, and the older man she’s been staying with dismisses her with a ride to the train station and a ticket back to the city.
With few resources and a waterlogged phone, but gifted with an ability to navigate the desires of others, Alex stays on Long Island and drifts like a ghost through the hedged lanes, gated driveways, and sun-blasted dunes of a rarefied world that is, at first, closed to her. Propelled by desperation and a mutable sense of morality, she spends the week leading up to Labor Day moving from one place to the next, a cipher leaving destruction in her wake.
Taut, propulsive, and impossible to look away from, Emma Cline’s The Guest is a spellbinding literary achievement.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Emma Cline’s debut novel, The Girls, revealed her as a master of menace and character, gifts that are even more pronounced in her disarmingly creepy follow-up. Alex is a 22-year-old grifter on the run, summering on the posh Long Island estate of her latest mark, fiftysomething finance guy Simon. A week before Labor Day, Simon throws Alex out, leaving her to drift around the wealthy beach enclave, reinventing herself over and over as she attaches herself to random strangers. We can’t quite explain it, but Cline somehow manages to make the blankly amoral Alex sympathetic—or at least a character we’re concerned for. Suspenseful, witty, and filled with a low-key sense of dread, The Guest feels like a blend of Patricia Highsmith and Joan Didion. It kept us hooked till the alarming end.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A 22-year-old woman loses her apartment and her grip on reality in the provocative latest from Cline (The Girls). After Alex's sex work dries up, she gets kicked out of her place in New York City and takes up the offer from Simon, an affluent older man, to spend the summer in the Hamptons. All goes well until a week before Simon's Labor Day party, when Alex dings his car, and Simon suggests she head back to the city. Hoping to preserve what luster she can in Simon's eyes, she doesn't mention she has nowhere to go and convinces herself she'll be welcome at his party. She then launches a series of schemes to get through the next five days, taking advantage of strangers' assumptions that she belongs. As Alex wanders from a rental full of hard partiers to a pool house on property left vacant for renovations, she draws on her sex work skills to keep herself welcome and leaves a trail of destruction. Before the first couple days are out, she's slept with another girl's boyfriend and damaged a blue-chip painting, while holding out hope, however misguided, that Simon will be happy to see her again. Cline has a keen eye for class differences and makes Alex into an intriguing protagonist who has learned to be observant, but must also recognize she's losing her judgment if she wants to survive. Like watching a car crash, this is hard to look away from.
Customer Reviews
Are you kidding me! I want my $ back
This was such an awful set up for the reader.
The girl sucked
The story never finished.
Such a disappointment and waste of money.
Ugh
Cringy book bad ending
I read a review saying that the character’s life was a slow train wreck. The problem is there’s never a wreck. There’s a slow train ride to nothing. Ending sucked. It is as though the author got tired and just stopped writing.
Disappointing.
Wow - why all the hype/press about this book? Thin plot and very thin character development. Very disappointing.