Ratings10
Average rating3.7
One of them has it all. One of them wants it all. Only one of them can win. Stella Bradley is beautiful, rich, and very good at getting herself into trouble. Violet Trapp is smart, self-aware, and laser-focused on escaping her humble background--especially after Stella gives her a glimpse into a world of glamour and wealth. They are best friends, and from the moment they meet in college, they know their roles: Stella in the spotlight, and Violet behind the scenes. After graduation, Violet moves to New York and lands a job in cable news, where she works her way up from intern to assistant to producer, and to a life where she's finally free from Stella's shadow. Until Stella decides to use her connections, beauty and charisma to land a job at the same network. Stella soon moves in front of the camera, becoming the public face of the stories that Violet has worked tirelessly to produce-and taking all the credit for it. But Violet isn't giving up so easily. As she and Stella strive for success, they each reveal just how far they'll go to get what they want--even if it means destroying the other person along the way. Set against the fast-paced backdrop of TV news, Necessary People is a propulsive work of psychological suspense about ambition and privilege, about the thin line between friendship and rivalry, about the people we need in our lives--and the people we don't.
Reviews with the most likes.
I loved this book. It's a perfect, quick thriller that you really can't put down.
I did like the fact this was set in a workplace - in my view, more writers should use the place we spend 40+ hours of our life weekly as a setting. And it did keep me reading. But sorry to say, these women aren't anyone I'd want to know or interact with and from what I know of human psychology, no one behaves like this in real life. I know psychological suspense is a heightened reality but the underlying motivations still have to ring true.
I didn't really want to put this down for things like working and driving and sleeping, but alas. It was a quick and engaging read, though I think it might have been mismarketed to call it a thriller, as I wouldn't say there were many twists or turns. It was a quiet simmer of resentment over a toxic friendship that inevitably boiled over. I actually finished it on Friday and sat with it for a few days, turning it over in my mind, wondering if I wished it had ended differently or taken a different turn. The one big twist kind of felt like it came out of nowhere, since the beginning part of the book was so mellow. But after a few days of contemplation, I'm deciding to shrug it off, declare I'm cool with it because this was really good anyway, and besides, there was a lot that was left unsaid, so who's to say the beginning parts in Violet's head are actually trustworthy? I realize that makes this sound more sinister than I mean it to be, but Violet recognizes this, which was pretty terrifying in and of itself; that you never know what's going to make someone snap until they do.
(I picked this from Book of the Month solely because that cover is so prettyyyyyyy.)