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Summary
Summary
Julia Summers seems to have it all- a Fifth Avenue apartment, a successful husband, and two adorable children attending the best private school in the city. She relishes wielding influence over her well-heeled girlfriends . . . but her star appears to be fading. That's why, when stranded in Manhattan for the summer as the entire Upper East Side flees to the Hamptons, Julia is on the hunt for the next big thing--the hot, new fad that will put her back on top.
Enter Flame, the new elite fitness craze. Seductive and transformative, Flame is exactly what Julia needs--and demure, naive instructor Tatum is her ticket in. Turning Tatum from giggly blonde to trendy guru proves hard work. Yet Julia's triumphant comeback at summer's end doesn't quite go as planned, and when things suddenly get ugly--and even deadly--she realizes she may have been in way over her head. And Tatum, waiting in the wings, begins to grasp just how much power her newfound stardom holds . . .
Then, with Julia's life already spiraling out of control, her husband is arrested for fraud and bribery. As her so-called friends turn their backs on her, and Tatum pursues her own agenda, Julia is forced to rethink everything she knew about her world to reclaim her perfect life.
But does she even want it back?
Author Notes
Sophie Littlefield is the author of more than twenty bestselling adult and YA novels. She is the recipient of the Anthony Award and the RT Book Reviews Reviewers' Choice Award. She has been shortlisted for the Edgar, Macavity, Barry, and Crimespree Awards. The New York Times has called her "a regular writing machine."
Lauren Gershell was born and raised on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, where she now lives with her family. She holds an A.B. and law degree from Columbia University. That's What Frenemies Are For is her first novel.
Reviews (4)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Littlefield (House of Glass) teams up with debut novelist Gershell in this witty glimpse into the lives of the very wealthy residents of Manhattan's Upper East Side. Julia Summers lives a life of luxury as wife to real estate developer James and mother of Henry and Paige, who attend the exclusive Graylon Academy. When pipes burst in the family's Hamptons summer home, the repairs for which will take the entire summer, she is forced to stay in the City for the season. Julia tries out new fitness club Flame and mentors personal trainer Tatum by helping her develop her own style and gain clients. As Tatum gets Julia into shape, Julia lets Tatum live at her apartment for a while. But Julia soon suspects that Tatum may have stolen from her and told lies about Julia to her friends. As Julia's friends become more distant and James is arrested and charged with bribery, Julia becomes the immediate target of gossip and soon discovers who her true friends are. The authors keep the plot moving at a quick pace, and it's fascinating to follow the two-sided personalities of her characters-superficially friendly but backstabbing when the opportunity arises. This entertaining page-turner is delicious, biting fun. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
A New York City socialite tries to impress her friends by making over a spin instructor into a weight-loss and mind-body-connection guru.In Littlefield (The Guilty One, 2015, etc.) and first-time author Gershell's debut novel as a pair, Julia Summers loves her husband, James, and her two children, Henry and Paige. But, to be honest, Julia really loves herself most of all. She's a vapid, vain, Upper East Side stay-at-home mom, and everything she does is carefully calculated to impress the fellow moms, her so-called friends, at her kids' private school. But she has become complacent, and her influence as a trendsetter has weakened. When a long-unnoticed leak ruins the Summers' vacation home in the Hamptons and Julia is forcedforcedto spend the summer in the city with her children while her husband works around the clock and her friends relax in their own country homes, she does the only thing she can think of: foists the kids off on summer camp, the nanny, and a backup babysitter so she can focus on losing weight and regaining her social cachet. She makes it her summer project to re-create Tatum, a bubbly instructor at Flame, a boutique gym that has not yet become popular with the rich-mom crowd. "That was my catnip," Julia says. "I was an urban bloodhound trawling for treasures that went unnoticed by others, and I was famous for my finds." But Tatum is not so easily controlled. She dates who she wants, she makes friends with whom she wants, and she makes the same bad decisions that 20-somethings everywhere have made and will continue make. The novel focuses solely on Julia's story, told in the first person, and the other characters and events appear flattened and one-dimensional through the prism of her opinions.There are no heroines in this tale: It's a predictable, slow-moving train wreck you can't look away from. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Julia has everything a New York mom could want an Upper East Side apartment, a devoted husband, friends, and social capital but she knows she has started to let things slide. She used to be the one who discovered the next big up-and-coming thing, and it's been a while since her last find. She is looking forward to a summer in the Hamptons to shore up her status, but a disaster leaves her vacation home unlivable. Stuck in the city for the summer, she decides to go looking for a project to get herself back on top of the mommy hierarchy and finds Tatum. Julia vows to turn this spin instructor into the next hot fitness guru and impress everyone by summer's end. But Tatum is not as easily managed as Julia might have hoped, and she might actually be a little bit devious. Everything is going wrong, but it will take a true crisis to show Julia who her real friends are. Unputdownable. Littlefield and Gershell write together seamlessly in this dishy summer read perfect for fans of Lauren Weisberger.--Diana Platt Copyright 2019 Booklist
Library Journal Review
Julia Summers has a $5 million apartment on Manhattan's Upper East Side, and a husband raking in the dough to support their two children and the nanny who cares for them. Her biggest worry is when her next coffee date with her best friends will be. However, when the family's summer trip to their Hamptons house is canceled, she's left stranded in Manhattan while her entire social circle flees the city. Needing a project, she cashes in on an auction basket that she won to a new cycling gym called Flame. There she meets Tatum, a young, fresh-faced fitness instructor, who turns into Julia's pet project, and then some. Multigenre novelist Littlefield ("Aftertime" series; The Guilty One; Garden of Stones) and newcomer Gershell come in hot with this look at the cutthroat world of Manhattan's social elite. Readers will love watching Julia groom Tatum into a fitness star; from discarding her Target leggings to treating her to keratin treatments and gel manicures, no stone is left unturned in the makeover process. VERDICT An excellent choice for fans of Lauren Weisberger.--Erin Holt, Williamson Cty. P.L., Franklin, TN
Excerpts
Excerpts
Chapter 1 There is a particular species of shrew that injects a dose of anesthetizing venom into its prey so it can feed at leisure while the victim is still alive. Maybe it's a kindness; more likely it's just nature's inclination to keep you still and compliant as disaster strikes. You only realize you're f***ed when it's too late. Think about it: markets crash when investors are feeling fat and happy. Spouses leave when their jilted partners are convinced things are finally on the right track again. And when it's your turn, there's nothing you can do. You're the mouse. That short-tailed shrew bearing down on you with an oily grin? That's that old familiar bastard, fate. In my case, the early months of the new year passed in not-unpleasant monotony, our household bobbing along in the privileged waters of the Upper East Side. My husband worked hard and made a lot of money. I was a stay-at-home mom of two young children, a pampered wife with a busy social calendar, a sought-after friend with a reputation for the mildly outrageous. At least, I had been for a time, when everything I touched turned--if not into gold, at least into Instagram posts with hundreds of likes and invitations to every party worth going to and the fawning admiration of those on the fringes of my circle. Dear reader, allow me to give you a little preview of my story: I had it all, once, but I let it slip away. I'd been a golden girl all my life: rich, spoiled, attractive, confident, with a talent for cultivating envy. But as I reached the mid-point of my thirties, I grew sloppy or lazy or distracted--it's hard to remember exactly why I stopped trying--and I lost my luster. People noticed; they drifted away. When I realized how far my star had fallen, I became desperate to fight my way back. Naïvely, I thought it couldn't get any worse than to be irrelevant. I lost my way. And then I lost my nerve. And then I made a mistake. It was a chilly evening in May, and James and I were attending our daughter's lower school play at the exclusive Graylon Academy on the Upper East Side of New York City, where our children would soon be finishing kindergarten and second grade. James had been working around the clock on a new deal, a former nursing home in Chelsea that his firm was turning into luxury condos, and I'd ordered him to take a night off and come to the performance. You don't show up to such an event without your husband unless you wish to answer for it all night. Managing our husbands is one of the skills on which we judge each other. I had asked our nanny to stay late and watch Henry, our younger child. I'd already dropped Paige off at the school to get ready for the play, in which she had a minor role as a mushroom. The play was a morality tale about inclusivity, as far as I could tell, told through vegetables. Benilda's contract was for 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. each weekday plus additional hours "as needed," for which we paid her extra. James had asked me several times why we couldn't cut back on her hours now that both Henry and Paige were in school. James didn't grow up here--he's from Allentown--and he could be insensitive to the fact that certain things simply weren't done. Our compromise was to ask Benilda to take on the housekeeping and laundry, which allowed us to let our twice-a-week housekeeper go. At work, James had no problem managing a staff of eleven. But Benilda--with her thick black bob cut precisely jaw length, her acid-washed jeans, the rapid-fire conversations she had on the phone in Tagalog with her daughters--could reduce him to silence with a single "Not so fast, Mr. James." This, in fact, was what she said as we were leaving, our contribution for the evening's charity collection in my hands, a stack of women's thermal underwear still in the Gap bag. "Not so fast, Mrs. Julia. Take this for school." She handed me a small box wrapped in shiny, cheap paper I didn't recognize. I'd always encouraged Benilda to help herself to my gift-wrap closet: before the holidays I mailed her packages to her daughters in Sorsogon myself. "What's this?" "Paige wanted to buy her own gift for poor kids. We went to CVS. She used her birthday money." I was torn between pride in my daughter and resentment that Paige had confided this wish to Benilda and not me. Lord knows I'd tried to foster a generous spirit in her, but empathy tends to be in short supply among eight-year-olds. "What is it?" "Nail polish kit. Deluxe kind with six colors." Benilda nodded with satisfaction. I had no choice but to take the box from her. "They wrap for free!" In the Uber, James brought it up. "I thought we didn't let Paige wear nail polish?" I rolled my eyes. "It's the school that doesn't allow nail polish. Which is all the more reason for her to want it. But it can't go in the collection. There was a very specific list. Practical things." Socks, phone cards, notebooks. Clothing in plus sizes. All of it to be donated to our sister school in the Bronx. "So what are you going to do? Toss it in the trash in the ladies' room?" James could only ask such a question because he never had to deal with dilemmas like this. To him it was amusing. But I had an even better solution. I simply left the nail polish in the Uber, a black Escalade so new it smelled like the showroom floor. Maybe the next rider would have a creative idea for it. Or a young niece. No longer my problem, at any rate. Our driver dropped us off around the corner from the school on Madison Avenue; the street in front of Graylon was as crowded as any weekday pickup. The evening's highlight was the play, but there was also the sister school collection and a silent auction. Graylon Academy never missed an opportunity to squeeze a few bucks from the parents on top of the fifty thousand dollars per child we paid for tuition every year. Missing these events did not go unnoticed. Few parents dared risk it. "Jesus," James said, surveying the line to check in, snaking out through the open doors from the lobby. I could make out Hollis Graves at the desk, flipping through her spreadsheets, checking people's names off the list. "Yes, well, welcome to my life." I shouldn't have said it. It was petty and not even accurate. It was true that I served on a lot of school committees and put in a ton of volunteer time, but many of my duties were fairly pleasant, involving lots of wine-drenched "planning" lunches. And I'd learned to avoid the worst tasks--you wouldn't find me sitting at a desk checking off names under the glare of all these parents' impatience. We stood in line, not speaking. Behind us were Emery Souza and her mother-in-law. I said a perfunctory hello, but things had been cool between me and Emery since she ran against me for treasurer in the PTA election two years ago and won. When we finally reached the sign-in table, I was ready. "You're such a trouper to do this, especially all by yourself." Hollis gave me a thin smile. "Poppy was supposed to be helping me, but apparently she threw her back out." "Oh dear," I said, already turning away. "Oh look, James, let's check out the silent auction." These auctions, as you can probably guess, are tedious. The amount of effort that goes into them hardly justifies the return, or the annoyance of having to lug home whatever prize you accidentally overbid for. Last year, I bid three hundred dollars on a Nambé platter, never imagining I'd win. I offered it to Benilda, who said she didn't have room for it, and it went directly into the Goodwill box. But you have to bid on something. Several somethings, really, if you want to show you're a team player. And occasionally there are amazing lots, like a weekend at someone's place in Aspen, which was literally next door to Jessica Biel's. It ended up going for over twenty thousand dollars. We strolled along the raffle table with the other parents, more relaxed now that the onus to make conversation was off. James was not at his finest at school events, where he tended to be testy and restless. I bid a hundred dollars on a manicure at Bliss, and another two hundred on a miniature Graylon Academy uniform for an American Girl doll. Then I saw a frilled and bow-tied basket with a vaguely familiar red and orange logo on the card. two personal spinning sessions at FLAME! the hand-lettered sign read, and I realized where I'd seen that logo before: a boutique gym had popped up a few months ago in a basement retail space on Eighty-fourth Street off Lexington Avenue that was once occupied by a video rental store. spinning * boxing * hiit * mindfulness, the sign out front promised, and I'd been intrigued by the clientele I'd seen coming and going whenever I walked by: firefighters from the station down the street, students, artsy types, merchants, waiters, cops. Everyone, it seemed, but people like me and my friends. Excerpted from That's What Frenemies Are For: A Novel by Sophie Littlefield, Lauren Gershell All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.