Good Rich People
Good Rich People book cover

Good Rich People

Hardcover – January 25, 2022

Price
$15.39
Format
Hardcover
Pages
336
Publisher
Berkley
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0593198254
Dimensions
6.2 x 1.07 x 9.26 inches
Weight
1.23 pounds

Description

"The rich live differently than the rest of us, and that's never more evident than this chilling account of one family that plays a sick and twisted game with their tenants."— Good Housekeeping “[T]hink: “Gossip Girl” meets a murder-mystery spinoff of The Real Housewives .... it’s one of the best books I’ve read this year."— New York Post “With writing that truly embodies the raw evil of greed, Brazier crafts cunning characters whom readers will be so excited to hate.”— Shondaland “Taut, chilling, and completely original…elegantly explores the chasm between the haves and the have-nots.”— Ellery Lloyd, New York Times bestselling author of The Club "A novel that's equal parts edge-of-your-seat suspenseful, bitingly funny, and wholly original."— Chandler Baker , New York Times bestselling author of The Husbands “[A] page-turner of the highest order.”— PopSugar “Wickedly sharp, deviously hilarious, and flawlessly executed.”— Kiersten White , New York Times bestselling author of And I Darken “Fizzy and hilarious, dangerous and outrageous. It’s like chugging a flute of champagne that’s been lit on fire. I loved the hell out of it.”— Stephanie Perkins , New York Times bestselling author of There’s Someone Inside Your House “The most vicious thrill ride I’ve been on in years—a satirical, dead-eyed look at class and money in a world frighteningly like ours, but with just enough askew to feel deeply unsettling.” — Amy Gentry , author of Good as Gone “Dark, adrenaline-fueled, and wickedly funny...a compulsive tale of privilege and survival that grabs you from the first page and keeps you guessing breathlessly until the very last.”— Emma Rous , USA Today bestselling author of The Au Pair “Full of fast cars, designer clothes, and pulse-racing cinematic thrills, this is a sharp-edged look into the lives of zip code 90210 residents.”— Library Journal "[A]n intelligent and thought-provoking page-turner that keeps you on the edge of your seat until the very end."— Criminal Element “Fiendish…Readers with a taste for the idiosyncratic and the macabre will find much to relish.”— Publishers Weekly (starred review) “A deliciously savage, viciously sharp-edged thriller.”— Jesse Q. Sutanto , author of Dial A for Aunties “I dare you to not become obsessed.”— Laurie Elizabeth Flynn , author of The Girls Are All So Nice Here “Haunting and ingenious.”— Amber Garza , author of When I Was You "Meticulously plotted and masterfully executed, this story delivered on all its promise...Brazier's voice is killer." — Justin A. Reynolds , author of Opposite of Always “[A] little creepy, but in a good way."— Betches "This fresh, modern thriller hits the sweet spot between satire and horror."— Deadly Pleasures Mystery Magazine Eliza Jane Brazier is an author, screenwriter, and journalist. She currently lives in California, where she is developing her booksxa0for television. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. LYLA I get so bored sometimes, I think I will do anything to stop it. I decide to make Graham dinner. He blames me for what happened. We don't have anything in the kitchen except Mo‘t-dozens and dozens of bottles that Graham's mother, Margo, keeps giving us, daring us to celebrate. I decide to make spaghetti because it's European and I think I can manage it on my own. The housekeeper got spooked and left, so we've been ordering in. I need to hire someone before Margo does, but I like how our house looks with a little dust. It looks like people actually live here. I go to my closet to choose an outfit for the market. Everything in my closet is shades of gray. I've always wanted a signature color. Margo's is white. Graham's is blue. He says it's a power color. All of my underwear is blue. I select a gray cashmere top and gray cashmere bottoms. Not the same shade of gray, because I don't want to look like an insane person. I accessorize with the exact right amount of diamonds and the hot pink gator Kelly bag I won in a game with Margo. I stop to check my reflection in the full-length mirror. Sometimes I am scared by how beautiful I am. Every inch of me is buffed and primed. My face hangs exactly right. My muscles are taut and organized. I am scared because I don't want to lose it: the shaped nails, the tip of my nose, the sapphire glow of my eyes. I am sad because I want everyone to see it, but I don't want to see them. I want them to know how lucky I am but I don't want them to have access to me. It's a real problem. I pass through the living room on my way out. It's Monday and light is streaming through the wall of windows, onto the travertine dining table, the gold bar chairs, the carved silver accents. The house is decorated to Graham's taste because I don't have any. I acquired his taste the day we got married. It was easier that way. Marriages fail because people are different. I want to be the same. Look the same, feel the same, have the same appetites. I want to cross the stars for us. I pass through the courtyard on my way toward the gate. The flowers stink. The fountain gurgles uselessly, like a body choking on its own blood. Our house looks like a handful of glass tumbling down a hill. Our front facade is modern, stoic, but when you step inside, the house stretches, open-plan, back and back forever, until it reaches a wall of windows. What you can't see from inside is the structures, the plinths underneath that hold it up, allow for the illusion of those never-ending floors. In the hills, people will build anywhere. The more perilous the precipice, the more insecure the foundation, the more they need to build something on it. It's a challenge, a victory of money over matter. Our house is built on the edge of a cliff. And underneath it, between those concrete plinths, is a hidden guesthouse. It was built to hold up the house above. Margo once used it to store her exotic shoe collection, but now we use it to store a person. I exit the gate and lock the door behind me. I can see Margo's tower above, chiseled to a point. Margo's house is like a castle, with all the requisite wars and rumors of wars. Graham says one day we'll live there, when he inherits everything, but I have no doubt that Margo will live forever to spite me. I sometimes wish we would move somewhere, start our own life with our own money. But there is a little-known fact about people with money: They are beholden to people with more money. So although Graham could afford his own house and his own life, his mother has more money. His mother has money that makes our money look poor. When you're rich, you can control everything. Except the richer. Graham is afraid of losing his mother's money. Maybe even losing his mother-who knows? So we live in a glass house beneath her fortress, in a tidy alcove in the hills above Los Angeles, the ugliest and most beautiful city in the world, depending on where you're standing. There is a little village square with a market just three blocks away but I have to drive. The streets in the hills are narrow and uneven and there are no sidewalks. Only mad people walk in LA. For my birthday, Graham gave me a gray Phantom. It's terrible to drive in the hills. I've scraped the back end four or five times and cracked the rear lights but Graham won't fix them because he thinks it's funny. It takes me ages to get it out of the garage and even longer to navigate the narrow streets of the hills because inevitably cars appear going the other way and I have to honk until they back up. People are such assholes. I finally make it under the stone archway that signals the village. It's designed to look like a European enclave, all stone streets and storybook architecture. It really just looks like an abandoned fairy tale. When Graham and I first moved in, we walked to the village market together at dusk to buy a bottle of red wine. The memory itself has very little to offer-it was dark and we were holding hands-but what I remember is not the night itself, but the promise of the future contained in it, how I thought that we would do this again, perpetually: walk beneath the arches in the semidark, kiss in the stone corner of the vintage boutique, pretend we were a couple out of time. I remember saying, This is so magical. It's like we're somewhere else. It's like Disneyland! Now I drive beneath the arches and I think, We never came again. Not once. Graham works. We order everything in. If I ask him to go for a walk, he says, Are you kidding? Rich people don't walk. Their shoes aren't designed for it. I get to the market and find handmade pasta, but the sauces are all wrong. There is a clerk beside me filling the shelves-a teenager with a constellation of zits from his ear to his throat. "Excuse me?" I hold out the priciest pasta sauce. "Why is this so inexpensive? Is there something wrong with it?" The attendant looks flummoxed, like he has never been asked such a question. "Uh . . . I'd have to ask." "Do you have anything more expensive?" He blinks. "Uh . . . you could buy two?" "You should make it from scratch." A familiar woman approaches from farther down the aisle. I've probably seen her in the neighborhood. I turn to face her. She has three necklaces around her neck, so I know she's crazy. One is a star, one is a circle and one is a cactus. I've seen the star necklace before, but it's a popular design. "Me?" I can't believe she's talking to me. Her under-eye area is clogged with mascara dust. She has wrinkles but she is probably younger than me. She just doesn't have a good doctor. "It would be more expensive if you bought all the ingredients separately." She crosses her arms. She carries a shopping basket, but it's empty. I set the pasta sauce back on the shelf, stamp my foot, throw up my hands. "I have no idea what's in pasta sauce!" I say, like nobody does. "I can help you"-she shifts her hip-"if you want." She purses her chapped lips. Those three necklaces glitter with menace. But Graham would be so impressed if I made my own pasta sauce. Even more impressed if I had someone make it for me. The corner of my Kelly bag is digging into my side, so I adjust it. "Oh, would you? I would so appreciate it." She nods eagerly. I indicate my cart. "Would you mind? It's so hard to carry a bag and push a cart." I frown. She hesitates, face closing. She doesn't know what it's like having to carry a Kelly bag everywhere. It's not like I can just put it in the cart! She sighs and swings her plastic basket into my cart. I follow her to the produce section. She finds me the priciest tomatoes, precut garlic, red onions. It's a good thing I'm there, because one of the onions looks dirty and I make sure she swaps it out. As she shops, she explains to me how to mix everything together. Of course, I don't pay attention. I hate listening to people when they talk. "Got it?" she asks when all the ingredients are in my cart. "No," I say blithely. She shifts from foot to foot. "I'll never get it! We used to have a housekeeper who did all this, but we had to let her go," I lie. "She was very religious." That part is true. She suggested we were all going to hell. I privately thought hell couldn't be worse than Margo. At least in hell you don't have hope. "I could help you," the woman says, "if you want." She adjusts her empty basket. "I'm actually looking for work." I find myself considering it. She seems to know her stuff, and I do need to hire someone before Margo does. It looks like I would be doing the woman a favor. Her hair is knotted. Her eyes lack sleep. Her nail beds are dirty and uneven. She'd be very lucky to work for us. There are far worse places to be. Her necklaces remind me of something, but I can't remember what. Maybe it's someone I used to know. Or maybe it's me. LYLA My new housekeeper helps me unload the bags and carries them to the gate. As I unlock it, my eyes shoot automatically to the tower. I have to remind myself she can't see us. My housekeeper notices. "That's a big house. Who lives up there?" "Margo. She's Graham's mother. Graham is my husband." The key sticks and I have to fight the lock. She sets down the bags and helps me. "I'm Astrid, by the way." "Oh." The name is too pretty for her. "Lyla. But you can call me Mrs. Herschel." It's dangerous to be on intimate terms with staff. Not just for me. The gate groans as she unlocks it. "It's a beautiful gate," she says. "Thank you. Graham got it from some monks or something." I hate the gate. It's some elaborate wood-carved delicate thing. It always seems on the verge of snapping, and the lock sticks. She readjusts the bags and follows me into the courtyard. She stops at the fountain. "What a nice water feature." "It's loud." I was always taught to never take a compliment well. It's rude. She gasps when I open the front door. Most people do. To the untrained eye, the house looks like it is floating. Guests are always careful when they take their first step out on the floor. My housekeeper is no different. She steadies herself on the side table. "This house is stunning." "Yes, it's a work of art. But it's a terrible place to live. Maybe people aren't supposed to live in works of art. The kitchen is this way," I say although she can see it. Everything but the bedroom and the bathroom are open-plan. The floor is segmented by modern furniture, a fireplace we never use. At the wrong angle it looks like a game of Tetris sliding toward the glass. The view is the most spectacular, so clear that it sometimes seems the mountains are inside with you, the trees and the houses all close and collected. "When will your husband be home?" she asks as she sets the bags on the kitchen counter. The setting sun pierces the glass. She raises a hand against it. Her face is blue and yellow. "Not for another hour. Can you finish by then?" I say. She nods. I set my bag on the counter and lean in close. The sun catches in my eyes but I let it. "I need to ask you a favor." She nods, but I wait until she croaks, "Okay." There is a fuzz of sweat along her top lip. I can tell she is uneasy. It's something about this house that does it. People feel themselves falling. It took me ages to get used to. "Don't mention to my husband where we met. Let's pretend you're an old friend, someone I can trust. I can trust you, can't I?" "You just met me," she says, which proves her trustworthiness. "Exactly." I straighten my spine. "I can't trust anyone I know." I sit on a bench at the kitchen island and watch her cook because I don't have anything else to do. It's soothing actually, the way she knows just what to do and when. It's like watching a witch cast a spell, a pinch of bay leaves and a sparkle of salt. I am not used to seeing people do things with their hands. There is something so earthy about it. Her necklaces glint and twist together. "Where did you learn to do this?" I imagine taking cooking lessons but what would be the point when you can hire someone better without lifting a finger? "My mother taught me." Her voice is monotone. She's in a cooking trance. "We used to have a tenant who cooked." I sigh into my knuckles. "You could smell it rising up all the way from down there." I indicate the yard beyond the glass, which is blackening by the minute. "A tenant?" "Yes, we used to take tenants in our guesthouse. It was our way of giving back. We would find someone in need and try to help them. This world can be so inaccessible." I have repeated this spiel so many times, it comes easily off my tongue, but my nose crinkles, my tongue sours. "Used to?" Her eyes tip up, catch mine, then flutter down. "We stopped after the last one. It turns out it's very draining having a stranger practically underneath you. You end up wrapped up in their lives. Besides"-I stand up, walk across the floor to the point in the glass where you can see the house down below-"it's so hard helping people, you know. Some people just don't want to be helped." I see the roof peaking out from below, the porch and the fence around it. I remember nights on that same porch, how loud we would laugh, knowing our laughter would rise up. "There's a little guesthouse right there. It's a terrible place to live. It's very dark and cold. I told Graham we ought to keep the help down there. Would you want to live there?" Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A G
  • ood Morning America
  • 'January Book That Can Get Us Through Anything'A Most Anticipated Novel of 2022 by
  • The New York Times
  • ,
  • Good Housekeeping
  • ,
  • Harper's Bazaar
  • ,
  • Entertainment Weekly
  • ,
  • New York Post
  • , PopSugar, Shondaland, Yahoo!, and Crime ReadsA destitute woman deceives her way into the guesthouse of a Hollywood Hills mansion and inadvertently becomes a target in the twisted game of the wealthy family upstairs in the next intoxicating novel from Eliza Jane Brazier.
  • Lyla has always believed that life is a game she is destined to win, but her husband, Graham, takes the game to dangerous levels. The wealthy couple invites self-made success stories to live in their guesthouse and then conspires to ruin their lives. After all, there is nothing worse than a bootstrapper.    Demi has always felt like the odds were stacked against her. At the end of her rope, she seizes a risky opportunity to take over another person’s life and unwittingly becomes the subject of the upstairs couple’s wicked entertainment. But Demi has been struggling forever, and she’s not about to go down without a fight.     In a twist that neither woman sees coming, the game quickly devolves into chaos and rockets toward an explosive conclusion.   Because every good rich person knows: in money and in life, it’s winner takes all. Even if you have to leave a few bodies behind.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(334)
★★★★
20%
(223)
★★★
15%
(167)
★★
7%
(78)
28%
(311)

Most Helpful Reviews

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I didn’t even like the dog

Do you know how bad a book has to be and how unlikeable everyone is for me to not like the dog? I’ll give you an example of the writing style:

I did not like this book. I did not like characters. I did not like dog. I finished reading it. I don’t know why. I should’ve stopped. It was that bad. Nothing redeemable. No story. Too slow. Not thrilling. I want to bang my head. I want to set the book on fire. I don’t want anyone else to read it. I didn’t like it.

How did an editor let these short, choppy, mundane sentences pass for writing?? This is a thriller? There was literally nothing suspenseful about it. I rolled my eyes, sighed, and looked at my watch more than anything. It took me almost 2 weeks to read, and I read 2 full novels before going back to it. I just wanted it to be over and now that it is, I want those hours back.

I could’ve like... stirred soup instead, or shoveled snow, or gotten a colonoscopy and the time would’ve been better spent.
16 people found this helpful
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BEYOND expectations!!!

I have been waiting for this book for over a YEAR now - bc I loved Eliza’s last novel, If I Dissappear. And my goodness, it was SO WORTH THE WAIT!!! I couldn’t stop reading Good Rich People - the characters, the plot, the intrigue - I DIDNT WANT IT TO END!!!
6 people found this helpful
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Dark Satire

I struggle with how to rate this one.

I appreciated the premise and I certainly didn't dislike it as much as I did Brazier's previous book. There are a couple of decent twists and a plethora of unlikable characters.
Are there plot holes and things that are just unbelievable? Yes for sure.
There's really not a huge amount of plot overall if I'm honest.
But in the end, I thought it was a kind of tongue-very-far-in-cheek snarky tale about how the rich think they are so far above everyone else to the point they will do bizarre and shocking things to avoid being bored. And what might happen if someone outside of that crowd entered their world.

Reminded me a lot of the movie Ready or Not. Dark and subversive, yet it doesn't go quite far enough in that direction to make me really love it. Still it will have fans for those who can get where the author was going with this.

Warning that a dog dies in the story. I didn't get to know the dog much ahead of time so it didn't bother me as much as it probably could have.

I voluntarily reviewed a complimentary copy of this book, all opinions are my own.
6 people found this helpful
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Waste of Time

This is one of the worst books I have ever read. Completely improbable & thoroughly nonsensical.
5 people found this helpful
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contender for worst novel ever

This is one of the worst novels I've read. The characters are all unlikable (self-centered, shallow, mean) and the "plot" is so implausible as to be a (bad) parody. The logistics within the novel don't even make sense. As a bonus both people and dogs die. The author apparently writes for TV where stuff like this has an audience. Perhaps is does in print also, but I'm not among them.
4 people found this helpful
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I live for dark thrillers, and Eliza delivered one loony, straight-jacket-wearing story!

Lyla and her husband, Graham, like to play dangerous games. The wealthy couple invites self-made tenants to live in their guesthouse and plot to ruin their lives. Demi is at the end of her rope. She seizes a risky opportunity to take over another person's life and unknowingly becomes the couple's target of cruel entertainment. But Demi's a fighter and won't go down without a fight. The game quickly escalates into chaos and rockets toward an explosive conclusion in a twist that neither woman sees coming.⠀

GOOD RICH PEOPLE is a disturbing, psychological thriller about a wealthy couple and Lyla’s mother-in-law. The Herschel's are bored and yearn for amusement, even if it's at the expense of another. To put it nicely, this family is batsh*t crazy. They are privileged with no sense of rules or morals. Graham and his mother are so out of touch with reality that it blew my mind how far they were willing to go for some temporary "fun." Lyla married Graham for his luxurious lifestyle and movie-star good looks. Lyla usually stood by watching the cat and mouse game, but now it's her turn to bait the prey. I didn't hate Lyla; she had likable moments, but being married into this arrangement sadly changed her ethical compass.⠀

Eliza impeccably created a snobby group of personalities who made you cringe at every turn. Demi's character, shy at first, but a fighter none the least, also had questionable motives. It was pretty odd yet fascinating that I didn't care about the victim either. This thriller had it all; these rich people could get away with anything, even murder. Although I had a devilish grin on my face by the finale, I did not want it to end! I live for dark thrillers, and Eliza delivered one loony, straight-jacket-wearing story! And after reading this, maybe being middle class doesn't sound so bad after all!
4 people found this helpful
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Infuriating Satirical Psychological Thriller

" You wouldn't think you would be able to eat with a dead body less than fifty feet away from you...You wouldn't think you would be able to do a lot of things until you do."

Oh and the things, the horrible things the awful characters do in Good Rich People by the disturbing creative mind of writer Eliza Jane Brazier will leave you cringing and often breathless.

Without revealing too much in this at times infuriating satirical psychological thriller be forewarned no one is likeable, worth rooting for or trustworthy. Disturbed Lyla is married to wealthy soulless Graham who is the puppet of his purely evil mother Margot. Graham is not filthy rich and he is waiting for mother Margot to die so he can live in filthy richness.

While they wait they play a game with real people. They find self made successful people and invite them to stay at their hidden guesthouse underneath their mansion on the edge of a cliff. Then they deviously dismantle and ruin the lives of their houseguests. After all new money is so gauche.

What they don't expect is that their next guest Demi is not their typical victim. In fact she is not who they think she is at all. Let the twisty games begin!

This book was such a weird reading experience. Normally I wouldn't keep reading a story where I couldn't stand anyone even the victims of sadistic behavior. Credit for keeping me engaged goes to the clever writing style of the author. I realized she knows these people are abhorring but that is the point. Their wealth makes them believe their entitlement is deserved and their manipulations have justification in their boredom. It was mesmerizing and compelling through every twisty curve I didn't see and the ones I saw a mile away. Read this one with a bit of tongue in cheek and know you are a decent human.

I received a free copy of this book from the publishers via Netgalley for a fair and honest review. All opinions are my own.
4 people found this helpful
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Who write this? Moet marketing team?

So silly and annoying and so much product placement. Up to you if you want to waste your time.
3 people found this helpful
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Twisty, messed-up book

There is blood in the fountain turning the water an eerie rust color. I call someone to drain it.”

This is how this sick story begins. Let me start by saying these rich people are crazy! I hated them all immediately! I’d need bottles of Moët-their drink of choice - to survive a day with them.
Lyla is married to the gorgeous Graham who’s mother Margo is the worst rich person of all!
Lyla is bored! Graham is bored! Margo is bored! They are all so bored and self-centered that they create their own entertainment. The game: invite successful people to live in their guest house and then destroy their lives. Hence the blood in the fountain when the game went too far. I don’t know how, but I actually started to feel sorry for these crazy rich people.

A vulgar, crazy, twisty tale with bad rich people I loved to hate!
3 people found this helpful
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Not So Good Rich People

Book review: Good Rich People by Eliza Jane Brazier

Good Rich People is an adult suspense novel about a trio of the ultra wealthy and the games they play with other people’s lives for their own amusement.

Good Rich People is told in alternating POV’s between wealthy Lyla (wife of Graham and daughter-in-law to Margo) and Demi (their new tenant who stumbles into their lives by accident) against a glittering Los Angeles backdrop of wealth and privilege. Lyla is tasked with destroying the life of their latest unwitting tenant in a long standing game that her husband and mother-in-law invented. The game is that they rent part of their home to a self-made person on the cusp of success and then slowly unmake them. But Lyla can’t figure Demi out because she’s not who they were expecting to show up when the game began.

I would have enjoyed this book more if I approached it as a dark comedy instead of a straight thriller. The over-the-top descriptions of wealth, the lack of moral compasses among the characters and the weird descriptions of things as mundane as Graham’s scent made it an odd reading experience overall. It was written as if someone listened to Lorde’s “Royals” on repeat decided to write a book about rich people being awful. There was nothing remotely human or relatable about the interactions within the entire book and I quickly grew exhausted of their machinations (and Graham’s scent) and just wanted people to die or whatever.

I wanted to enjoy this one and be entertained by the scenario of Spoiled vs Scrappy but none of the characters were clever or interesting enough to make it work for me.
2 people found this helpful