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Precious You: A Novel

di Helen Monks Takhar

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
696381,349 (2.88)4
"To Katherine, twenty-four-year-old Lily Lunt is a typical "snowflake." Soft, entitled, unflaggingly earnest, the privileged, politically correct millennial will do whatever she can to make it big as a writer, including leveraging her family's connections. She's got it easy. To Lily, Katherine Ross, a career woman in her early forties, is a holdover from another era: clueless, old-fashioned, and perfectly happy to build her success on the backs of her unpaid interns. When Lily is hired as the new intern at Leadership magazine, where Katherine is editor in chief, her arrival threatens the very foundations of the self-serving little world that Katherine has built. But before long, she finds herself obsessively drawn to Lily, who seems to be a cruel reminder of the beauty and potential Katherine once had, things she senses Lily plans to use against her. Is Katherine simply paranoid, jealous of Lily's youth as she struggles with encroaching middle age? Is Lily just trying to get ahead in the cutthroat world of publishing? Or is there a more sinister motivation at play, fueled by the dark secrets they're both hiding? As their rivalry deepens, a disturbing picture emerges of two women pitted against each other across a toxic generational divide--and who are desperate enough to do anything to come out on top. As unsettling as it is provocative, Precious You cuts to heart of questions surrounding modern female rivalry, obsession and deceit. Helen Monks Takhar delivers an explosive take on the contemporary workplace and the disparate generations that power it, turning the professional roles women play on their heads in a razor-sharp, revenge-driven thriller for our age"--… (altro)
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This is a workplace rivalry book, We have Katherine a woman in her forties who is an editor of a magazine which has just been taken over, she has just come back to work after being off with MH issues, and Lily in her twenties, Lily is an intern and the niece of the new owner and she basically wants to destroy Katherine.
This is told in both Katherine and Lily’s POV and what I first thought was just going to be a rivalry between the different ages turned out to be more sinister.
I didn’t like either character all that much, and I did struggle to get through this, I had to keep putting it by to read something else, it was a little slow. It was dark and twisty with secrets but it wasn’t for me. ( )
  StressedRach | Jun 2, 2023 |
This was a creepy one that did an excellent job of looking into all the extremes we can see in relationships between different generations, and the way that both paranoia and gaslighting can work. I don't think the ultimate payoff in the ending held up and made it worth it. This was very much an analysis of two mentally ill women, which kind of made the book lose a lot of its creepiness and just become plain sad. While I did race through the last quarter to get to the reveal, I set this down at 47% and could have forgotten it quite easily. ( )
  whakaora | Mar 5, 2023 |
Precious You probably appealed to me most of all because of the workplace rivalry aspect. There's something rather fascinating about the way young whippersnappers swoop in and everything is theirs for the taking, forcing the old guard out to grass.

Katherine is 41, the editor of Leadership magazine. Lily is 23 and one of a raft of interns working with Katherine, but Lily is different. She almost entrances Katherine, causing ructions from day one.

From the very beginning of this novel it feels like something is very off about these characters. We know in the first chapter what has happened later on in the story. I think I'd have preferred to let it unfold from beginning to end, but having said that it definitely got my hackles raised early on.

I couldn't help but sympathise with Katherine. Don't get me wrong, I wasn't at all fond of her but to watch everything she had worked for being systematically stripped away by Lily was absolute car crash fiction. Very hard to read but I couldn't stop.

With Katherine providing the majority of the story, with interjections from Lily, this is such an incredibly introspective novel and I must admit to sometimes finding it hard to engage. Yet then it would pull me right back in, leaving me wide-eyed at what was taking place. To be honest, there were times I wanted to throw the book across the room (but I'd never do that to a book, of course) - I felt such a visceral reaction to what was occurring. I was furious on Katherine's behalf.

This is a book that will divide people. Actually, it divided me. I was a bit repulsed, a bit freaked out, a bit angry, and for the most part I was gripped. It's actually quite frightening, the hold some people seem to get on others, like a dog with a toy that they won't let go of, slowly ripping it to shreds. It's a chilling story of workplace jealousy. I hope I never meet anyone like Katherine or Lily! ( )
  nicx27 | Jul 4, 2020 |
This is a novel about obsession. A forty plus year old woman (Katherine) struggles to keep her position at a magazine while she sees a young vivacious upstart woman (Lily) as a usurper. The young woman does seem obsessed with replacing her. This is just beyond all belief. The fact that the beautiful young Lily wants to "inherit " every aspect of Katherine's life is crazy. The obsession goes both ways as Katherine tries to regain her younger hip days. Lily even wants Katherine's middle aged alcoholic failure of a live in boyfriend for her own. Why? ( )
  muddyboy | Jun 4, 2020 |
A thoroughly modern psychological thriller Precious You by Helen Monks Takhar is a disturbing story of obsession, betrayal, and revenge.

When 41 year old magazine editor Katherine Ross first meets her new intern Lily Lunt, she is both drawn to, and distrustful of, the bright, ambitious 24 year old. Already struggling with feelings of irrelevancy Katherine suspects that Lily wants her job, but Lily wants much more than that. Lily wants everything.

Unfolding from the alternating second-person perspective of Katherine, and first-person narrative of Lily, Precious You twists and turns as the two women engage in a sinister power struggle. I was never quite sure whose perspective of events was the most trustworthy, and Takhar skilfully nurtures that element of doubt.

Their complicated dynamic is well portrayed, and if you are inclined to choose a side in the war between these two women, you’ll quickly be disabused of the idea that either deserves to win. As the story unravels so do their darkest secrets, and Katherine and Lily have more in common than you might suspect.

Takhar’s exploration of female identity, toxic friendships, family dysfunction and the generational divide is surprisingly thought provoking. While both characters represent extremes, their thoughts and experiences are often relatable, from Katherine’s mourning for her lost youth (and looks), to Lily’s Millennial sensitivities.

There is plenty of tension sustained through the novel as the rivalry between Katherine and Lily intensifies, and I felt compelled to read to the end to not only see how far each would go, but learn the truths both are hiding.

While a little melodramatic, I found Precious You to be an intense, and thrilling read. ( )
  shelleyraec | Apr 10, 2020 |
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"To Katherine, twenty-four-year-old Lily Lunt is a typical "snowflake." Soft, entitled, unflaggingly earnest, the privileged, politically correct millennial will do whatever she can to make it big as a writer, including leveraging her family's connections. She's got it easy. To Lily, Katherine Ross, a career woman in her early forties, is a holdover from another era: clueless, old-fashioned, and perfectly happy to build her success on the backs of her unpaid interns. When Lily is hired as the new intern at Leadership magazine, where Katherine is editor in chief, her arrival threatens the very foundations of the self-serving little world that Katherine has built. But before long, she finds herself obsessively drawn to Lily, who seems to be a cruel reminder of the beauty and potential Katherine once had, things she senses Lily plans to use against her. Is Katherine simply paranoid, jealous of Lily's youth as she struggles with encroaching middle age? Is Lily just trying to get ahead in the cutthroat world of publishing? Or is there a more sinister motivation at play, fueled by the dark secrets they're both hiding? As their rivalry deepens, a disturbing picture emerges of two women pitted against each other across a toxic generational divide--and who are desperate enough to do anything to come out on top. As unsettling as it is provocative, Precious You cuts to heart of questions surrounding modern female rivalry, obsession and deceit. Helen Monks Takhar delivers an explosive take on the contemporary workplace and the disparate generations that power it, turning the professional roles women play on their heads in a razor-sharp, revenge-driven thriller for our age"--

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