Current:Home > NewsKiley Reid's 'Come and Get It' is like a juicy reality show already in progress -Thrive Capital Insights
Kiley Reid's 'Come and Get It' is like a juicy reality show already in progress
View
Date:2025-04-14 23:10:28
College is supposed to be a time to find out who you really are.
Sometimes that discovery doesn't go as you hoped.
"Come and Get It," (G.P. Putnam's Sons, 384 pp., ★★★½ out of four), follows a dorm hustle concocted by a manipulative writer and a money-hungry student. Out now, the highly anticipated book is the second novel by Kiley Reid, whose debut, 2019's "Such a Fun Age," was longlisted for the Booker Prize.
It's 2017, and Millie Cousins is back at the University of Arkansas for her senior year after taking a break to deal with a family emergency and to save as much money as possible. Millie is one of the four resident assistants at Belgrade, the dormitory for transfer and scholarship students. One of her first tasks is to help visiting professor and journalist Agatha Paul conduct interviews with students to research for her next book.
But Agatha is more fascinated than she expected by the three students in Millie's dorm who signed up to be interviewed. Agatha's planned topics on weddings is dropped, and she leans more into writing about how the young women talk about their lives and especially their relationship to money.
Check out: USA TODAY's weekly Best-selling Booklist
As the semester continues, the lives of Agatha, Millie and the residents of Millie's dorm are intertwined by hijinks, misunderstandings and a prank with rippling consequences.
There are many characters bustling in the pages of the college life laid out in the novel, almost too many, but this is where Reid really shines. The dialogue and personalities she created for each dorm resident, each classmate and each parent are so complete, it's like tuning into a juicy reality show already in progress. It's hard not to be as caught up in the storylines as Agatha is as we observe how events unfold.
More:'The Reformatory' is a haunted tale of survival, horrors of humanity and hope
Consumerism, race, desire, grief and growth are key themes in Reid's novel, but connection might be the thread through them all. The relationships each character develops — or doesn't — with the others, whether fraught or firm or fickle or fake, influence so much in their lives.
Reid's raw delivery may have you reliving your own youthful experiences as you read, remembering early triumphs of adulting, failed relationships or cringing at mistakes that snowballed and how all of these shaped who you are today. And perhaps you'll remember the friends who were there (or not) through it all, and why that mattered most.
veryGood! (568)
Related
- How breaking emerged from battles in the burning Bronx to the Paris Olympics stage
- Threats to federal judges have risen every year since 2019
- Best Red Lipsticks for Valentine's Day, Date Night, and Beyond
- Chiefs star Chris Jones fuels talk of return at Super Bowl parade: 'I ain't going nowhere'
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Lent 2024 food deals: Restaurants offering discounts on fish and new seafood menu items
- A man apologizes for a fatal shooting at Breonna Taylor protest, sentenced to 30 years
- Ariana Grande reveals new Mariah Carey collaboration: 'Dream come true'
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Democratic voters in Philadelphia's competitive Bucks County say they're unconcerned about Biden's age
Ranking
- Meet 11-year-old skateboarder Zheng Haohao, the youngest Olympian competing in Paris
- Illinois man dies instantly after gunfight with police officer, authorities say
- Tinder, Hinge and other dating apps encourage ‘compulsive’ use, lawsuit claims
- Kate Hudson says she receives 10-cent residual payments for 'Home Alone 2: Lost in New York'
- RFK Jr. closer to getting on New Jersey ballot after judge rules he didn’t violate ‘sore loser’ law
- When will the Fed cut interest rates in 2024? Here's what experts now say and the impact on your money.
- Kanye West Slams Rumor Taylor Swift Had Him Removed From 2024 Super Bowl
- New Mexico’s Democrat-led House rejects proposal for paid family and medical leave
Recommendation
A Georgia governor’s latest work after politics: a children’s book on his cats ‘Veto’ and ‘Bill’
3 South Carolina deputies arrested after allegedly making hoax phone calls about dead bodies
Jason Kelce tells Travis he 'crossed the line' on the Andy Reid bump during Super Bowl
Sabrina Carpenter and Saltburn Actor Barry Keoghan Confirm Romance With Date Night Pics
Travis Hunter, the 2
People's Choice Awards host Simu Liu promises to 'punch up': 'It's not about slandering'
Lack of snow forces Montana ski resort to close halfway through season
With student loan payments resuming and inflation still high, many struggle to afford the basics