Come and Get It

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What to expect

Bloomsbury presents Come and Get It by Kiley Reid, read by Nicole Lewis.

THE UNMISSABLE NEW NOVEL FROM THE AUTHOR OF BESTSELLING PHENOMENON SUCH A FUN AGE

* THE INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER *
* FEARNE COTTON'S HAPPY PLACE BOOK CLUB PICK FOR FEBRUARY *

‘I couldn’t put it down, and I didn't want to either’ EMILY HENRY
‘The drama is just too juicy – how could anyone resist a binge?’ GUARDIAN
‘Razor-sharp … Packs a huge emotional punch’ DAILY MAIL

Everything comes at a price. But not everything can be paid for…

Millie wants to graduate, get a job and buy a house. She’s slowly saving up from her job on campus, but when a visiting professor offers her an unusual opportunity to make some extra money, she jumps at the chance.

Agatha is a writer, recovering from a break-up while researching attitudes towards weddings and money for her new book. She strikes gold when interviewing the girls in Millie’s dorm, but her plans take a turn when she realises that the best material is unfolding behind closed doors.

As the two women form an unlikely relationship, they soon become embroiled in a world of roommate theatrics, vengeful pranks and illicit intrigue – and are forced to question just how much of themselves they are willing to trade to get what they want.

Sharp, intimate and provocative, Come and Get It takes a lens to our money-obsessed society in a tension-filled story about desire, consumption and bad behaviour.

‘Smart, funny and perceptive’ i
‘A perfect read’ STYLIST
‘Wonderfully immersive, propulsive and beautifully paced’ PAUL HARDING
‘Quiet and intense … A joy to read’ JESSICA GEORGE
‘Witty and nuanced’ RED
‘[An] incisive novel everyone will be talking about’ TOWN AND COUNTRY

Critics Review

This Arkansas-set campus tale about students with money and students without has arguably more to say about the hang-ups and have-nots of modern America. Reid wields a needle not a hammer, gradually loading her minutely observed human relationships with tension over class, race and power. I’ve spent the past three months in America feeling haunted by this novel’s final scene, one of the most devastating excoriations of consumerism you’re likely to read

Sunday Times

A brilliant book … Really interesting, looks at the lengths we’ll go to get money, and how it informs our decision making and also our relationships. It’s a really good read

Fearne Cotton, Happy Place Book Club

Kiley Reid has such a way with words … This book tackles money, privilege, race, and power dynamics … A book that’s begging to be discussed as Kiley explores these topics and leaves the reader to draw their own conclusions. I couldn’t stop thinking about it after I finished reading and the more I marinated on this book, the more I appreciated Kiley’s ambition

Glamour

A deliciously chewy, politically charged novel … The kind of book I want to debate with a room full of women drinking fishbowl-sized glasses of cheap Pinot Grigio with too much ice in it

Vogue

A zippy, laugh-out-loud campus novelReid’s writing is so very funny, always rooted in the everyday

i

This is a book about how money shapes people’s lives, and it’s for you if you enjoy a character-driven narrative in which everyone introduced comes with an elaborate backstory

Harper's Bazaar

Reading Kiley Reid’s fiction feels a bit like watching a prestige TV series. There are expansive casts of characters … The plots are pacy and compelling, motored by flashbacks and cliffhangers and twists, while also dealing with social issues – particularly race and class – that add intellectual heft. Dialogue is hyper-realistic … so that you can hear it aloud in your head … Reid is a talented comic writer. But it also raises deeper questions about how we view the lives of other people, as material for our own consumption. Are the attractions of books and TV so different from those of eavesdropping?

Guardian

A master storyteller … As fun to read as it is thought-provoking … In heart-breaking and deeply recognisable details … we see Reid’s pen at its sharpest

Stylist

A master plotter who’s engineering a spectacular intersection of class, racism, academic politics and journalistic ethics. Reid spots all the grains of irritation and deceit that get caught in the machinery of social life until the whole contraption suddenly lurches to a calamitous halt. Come and get it, indeed!

Washington Post

A biting comedy of campus manners

Mail on Sunday

An utter joy

Sunday Times

With her perceptive eye and ear, Reid imbues her novel with the stuff, literally and figuratively, of life … As I read Come and Get It I found myself thinking of certain writers who have, over the years, elected themselves as “capital C” Chroniclers of contemporary America. With this book, Reid demonstrates that she deserves a place in the running

New York Times Book Review

At once highly readable and an important comment on the lose-lose decisions millennials face in a bleak economy, this is a book you’ll devour in days

Harper's Bazaar

It gets to the heart of what Reid is: a consummate storyteller

Service 95

Reid brings her sharp gaze to the classic campus novel, and university life provides her with similarly rich material when it comes to deconstructing privilege … She also cleverly turns some of the genre’s dustier tropes on their heads … Part of what has always made campus stories so captivating is that they show us character as a work in progress – because our university days have always been about working out our sense of self. But contemporary tales like Reid’s are a necessary reminder: this leisurely exploration is a luxury not everyone can afford

Independent

Reid has an excellent ear for speech: you get the impression that she, like Agatha, has put in the hours listening to 20-year-olds chatter, bitch and plot. She’s also a sharp observer of the way in which money confers power or withholds it, and how this can intersect with race … The decision to foreground money is unusual, yet Reid pulls it off

Telegraph

A wonderfully written and intimate portrayal of entwined lives on campus. Quiet and intense all at the same time, it was a joy to read

Jessica George, author of MY NAME IS MAAME

Exploring hustle culture and capitalist attitudes, it weaves a compelling story that confronts the consequences of insatiable appetites for success

Elle

Kiley Reid is an expert at teasing apart the messy, complicated, nuanced layers of social dynamics, and has a rare gift for making the unknown feel intimately familiar and the familiar feel brand new. In Come and Get It, she’s crafted a story that moves with the momentum and inevitability of a snowball rolling down a mountain. I couldn’t put it down, and I didn’t want to either’

Emily Henry, No. 1 New York Times bestselling author of HAPPY PLACE

Kiley Reid’s books make me feel lucky to be a reader. I’m in awe – Come and Get It is a page-turning pleasure – stylish, sharp and breathtakingly smart. I can’t believe that one book can be this clever, cool and this much fun to read

Daisy Buchanan, author of INSATIABLE

Another razor-sharp, character-driven, coming-of-age story, which packs a huge emotional punch

Daily Mail

Smart, funny and perceptive

i news, Best Books to Read in January

Multi-layered and complex relationships between seriously flawed characters once again take centre stage as its narrative smartly delves into racism, social and economic status, and university campus politics in the 21st century. A perfect read for anyone who loved Netflix’s brilliant The Chair and Jean Hanff Korelitz’s Admission

Stylist

Wonderfully immersive, propulsive, and beautifully paced. On page one, there is a story that is already happening, and you’re plunged right into the novel’s world, already up and running, full of real people, and complicated – that is, substantive – as all hell. Just great

Paul Harding, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of THIS OTHER EDEN and TINKERS

Come and Get It is an engrossing novel full of intimately portrayed characters and the seemingly innocuous choices that lead to life-altering mistakes

Elizabeth Acevedo, author of FAMILY LORE and THE POET X

The book has a Netflix box-set breezy pace and knowing tone as it satirises staff and student attitudes towards money, hierarchy and status … An absorbingly twisty page-turner

i paper

The pleasure of Come and Get It lies in its plunge into the unfamiliar. This is a society in which poorer students work for richer ones — the Tyler types can call up Millie at all hours to settle dorm disputes or shift furniture — or save money by camping overnight outside a new branch of Chick-fil-A to win a year’s worth of free fried chicken. The tone is breezy and comic, but what’s really happening is shocking

The Times

Reid…masterfully captures the quiet misalignments that stem from a varying sense of what’s at stake…[A] novel of manners that acutely captures the modern moment

Vogue, The Best Books of 2024 So Far

A witty and nuanced exploration of race and female-occupied spaces – I loved the thread of menace running through it

Red

Kiley Reid’s next must-read … It’s packed with those awkward moments Reid is so talented at creating, making your toes curl as you read

Grazia, Hot to Drop

A brilliant author who creates ultra-memorable characters

Glamour, Best New Books of January 2024

If you loved the smash hit Such a Fun Age, don’t sleep on Reid’s newest … This is a story of indiscretions and gray areas, power dynamics and privilege that’s wound as tight as a violin string. Just don’t forget to breathe while you’re reading (go ahead and thank us later)

Good Housekeeping

A deft exploration of how microaggressions can lead to macro consequences, Reid’s second outing will appeal to readers who enjoy slow-burn, character-driven novels

Booklist

Kiley Reid returns with another incisive novel everyone will be talking about … A riveting and fascinating tale

Town & Country, Best Books of Winter

Kiley Reid’s characters are always layered with ethical dilemmas … Subterfuge, sex and self-seeking make things compellingly messy

Sainsbury's Magazine

A sardonic and no-holds-barred comedy of manners … Reid is a keen observer­ – every page sparkles with sharp analysis of her characters. This blistering send-up of academia is interlaced with piercing moral clarity

Publishers Weekly, starred review

An illuminating study of power, responsibility, and the bad choices we sometimes make, written in the fresh, bright language for which she’s known

Library Journal

Reid’s fiction, which highlights the ordinary social interactions in which larger forces – of class and racial inequality, financial and cultural capital – make themselves known. There are few outright villains in her stories; her characters often blunder along with good intentions, to comic and disastrous effect

Guardian

Reading a Kiley Reid novel is like watching a docuseries designed exactly for you. She captures those exceedingly awkward and real human interactions with such precision and specificity that you’re fully invested by the first page. Come and Get It is genius. It’s perfect

Liz Moore, author of LONG BRIGHT RIVER

[A] sharp, edgy social novel … Reid is a genius of mimicry and social observation

Kirkus

Beautifully told through the eyes of multiple characters, this intimate and revealing story from the critically acclaimed New York Times bestselling author of Such a Fun Age is not to be missed

BookBub, The 22 Best Books of Winter

An exciting new portrait of desire, consumption and recklessness, we have no doubt Reid’s new novel will be just as popular as the first

Luxury London, Best New Books

Come and Get It is a festival of micro-aggressions; it’s uneasy, and Reid doesn’t give any character a free ride. She skewers mean girls, mummy’s girls and freeloaders with both clarity and subtlety … The dialogue and little details [are] so excruciatingly accurate

AnOther magazine, Best Fiction for 2024

Come and Get It is a page-turning read filled with vengeful pranks and intrigue, but at its heart, it is a fascinating portrait of our obsession with material wealth

Chicago Review of Books, Must-Read Books of January 2024

It’s a perfect recipe … in a college setting, about discretion and desire, about money, want, and, most importantly, it’s by Kiley Reid

LitHub, Most Anticipated Books of 2024

The result is heartbreak that money can’t fix, and a smart novel that says a lot about race, money and female friendships

Heat

A thrilling, delectable look at wealth, privilege and desire

People Magazine, Best Books To Read in January 2024

The book is funny … The dialogue is particularly snappy … Most importantly, “Come and Get It” offers a deft examination of how young people negotiate their first brushes with independence and responsibility. Reid is particularly attuned to how her characters navigate matters of money and consumption … Reid’s novel carves its own path, capturing a sort of tragic malaise that itself suggests a state of young adulthood

Arkansas Times

Reid’s skillful storytelling and vibrant characters are sure to give you a great time

Book Riot

The kind of book you put down and immediately want to discuss

Vulture

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