Necessary people A novel

Anna Pitoniak

Book - 2019

Stella and Violet are best friends, and from the moment they met in college, they knew their roles. Beautiful, privileged, and reckless Stella lives in the spotlight. Hardworking, laser-focused Violet stays behind the scenes, always ready to clean up the mess that Stella inevitable leaves in her wake. After graduation, Violet lands a job in cable news and works her way up from intern to producer. Stella, envious of Violet's new life, gets hired at the same network in front of the camera and becomes the face of all Violet's work.As Violet and Stella strive for success, each reveals how far she'll go to get what she wants -- even if it means destroying the other person along the way. -- adapted from jacket

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Thrillers (Fiction)
Psychological fiction
Suspense fiction
Published
New York : Little, Brown and Company 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Anna Pitoniak (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
346 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780316451703
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Bad choices abound in Pitoniak's (The Futures, 2017) second novel, in which two friends' ambition and jealousy overwhelm their relationship. College is Violet's escape from her small Florida town and her emotionally abusive parents. There she meets outgoing Stella beautiful, rich, and charming and it becomes even easier to leave her past behind as she embeds herself in Stella's life, practically becoming a member of her family. Stella needs Violet, too, to temper her bad behavior and continually save her from herself. After graduation, Violet gets a job as an intern at a cable-news company and quickly moves up the ranks. But when Stella uses her connections to also get a job there and soon ends up in front of the camera, things turn ugly. Pitoniak's dialogue-heavy prose keeps a quick pace, and her characters and the TV-news setting ring true, even as the propulsive plot begins to strain credibility. Hand this to readers who like books exploring the dark side of female friendships, à la Megan Abbott, or fans of Tara Isabella Burton's Social Creature (2018).--Kathy Sexton Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Pitoniak's fantastic sophomore effort (after The Futures) concerns what happens when ambitious plain Jane Violet Trapp finds her social and professional territory impinged upon by her narcissistic and charming best friend Stella Bradley. After meeting in college, Stella and Violet fall into roles in which the former, a beautiful heiress, lives a life of excess from which the latter constantly has to save her. Once they graduate, Stella travels the world, while Violet works hard as an intern at the cable news network KCN, quickly rising through the ranks. Violet sees her job as a means to get as far away as she can from her childhood of poverty and abuse, and also a way to flourish in a world where unfocused Stella is always the brightest star. Resenting Violet's ascendency, Stella uses her connections to get a foot in the door at KCN, where she promptly steals Violet's thunder by getting promoted and receiving credit for a story that was Violet's brainchild; she also starts dating Violet's good pal Jamie. Stella's about to ink a multimillion-dollar contract when Jamie dumps her, sending her off the deep end. The friends have a huge fight before a fateful incident, leading Violet to wonder if Stella will ruin her one way or another. This stirring character study and treatise on the dark sides of ambition, friendship, family, and privilege will hook readers from the get-go. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A pair of college best friendsone born with everything; the other starting from nothingbecome post-college rivals, intent on success no matter the cost.Stella Bradley is rich and blonde and beautiful, a monied Manhattanite, irresponsible and razor-sharp. Violet Trapp is a hardworking kid from Florida with no money and no family support. Their connection is instant. "It wasn't that my personality changed when I met Stella," Violet reflects. "It was that it became.I didn't just want the friendship of this dazzling girl. I wanted the world that had made her so dazzling in the first place." Violet is determined to overcome her own roots; by studying the Bradleys, she imagines, she might become one of them. After college, Stella flits across the globe, and Violet, the "responsible one," stays in New Yorkliving in the Bradleys' apartment, intended for Stellagets an internship in cable news, falls in love with the job, is promoted, and then is promoted again. She excels in production, behind the scenes, cultivating sources, engrossed in the work. When Stella returns, though, the relationship can't quite pick up as before: Violet has an identity now, separate from Stella; the power between them has shifted. And then Stella pulls a few stringsfamily connections, natural charmand begins encroaching on Violet's new turf. She, too, gets a job at the network and begins climbing the ranks. And her newfound ambitions are not behind the scenes but in front of the camera, once again eclipsing Violet, restoring the balance between them: invisible, hardworking, talented Violet and Stella, the star. But this time, Violet is fighting backby any means necessary. If the pivotal event of the bookand its sinister aftermathseems slightly far-fetched given the relative grounding of the first two-thirds of the novel, who cares? It's a trivial quibble given the sheer pleasure of reading this book. Pitoniak (The Futures, 2017) is an astute social observer, and the novela literary thriller about class aspiration and young female ambitionis a twisting delight with a haunting punch.Deceptively nuanced, and impossible to put down, this is escapism with substance. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.