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Sign up todayCome and Get It: A GMA Book Club Pick
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Learn moreBookseller recommendation
“One of Kiley Reid's talents is creating extremely nuanced characters. By the end of Come and Get It, I felt like I could recognize Agatha and Mille's voices from across a crowded room, I knew them so well. A study of female relationships mostly set at the University of Arkansas in 2017, Reid's prose dissects each power imbalance carefully, and every absolutely poor choice is made wholeheartedly. The heart wants what it wants. Come and Get It is an absolute pleasure and Reid nails the southern dialect. Five out of five stars!”
— Rachel • Avid Bookshop
Bookseller recommendation
“If you love a character-driven, multiple perspective novel of shrewd drama, this book is for you! With subtle undertones of social commentary on class and race, the plot follows a professor, an RA, and a handful of underclassmen at a college whose lives and stories intertwine to the point of chaos over the course of a semester. ”
— Olivia • Author's Note
Bookseller recommendation
“Kiley Reid again delivers an expert study of race, class, and money- this time set against the backdrop of residential life at the University of Arkansas. She examines where adulthood begins, and the very grey area between right and wrong. The audiobook is superbly narrated. ”
— Kelli • The Novel Neighbor
Bookseller recommendation
“No one writes class and social hierarchy like Kiley Reid. In Come and Get It, Reid turns her eye to a college campus, digging into all the petty drama, backhanded compliments, and codeswitching. The result is an engrossing, explosive story.”
— Lindsay Lynch • Parnassus Books
Bookseller recommendation
“Kiley Reid is the master of social tension, and the tension is delicately taut in Come and Get It. The narration is superb, capturing the nuances of various Southern accents that really gave me #BamaRush TikTok vibes in the very best way. ”
— Adah • Main Street Books Davidson
Bookseller recommendation
“A fun and thought provoking book that depicts young women, and not so young women, thinking about money, love and academia. I read this on vacation, and it was a good pick. Light enough for an airplane read, but still had a lot going on and interesting characters. The college girls and RAs in the dorms were all quite engaging, while Agatha, the conflicted and flawed central character, interested and repelled me. ”
— Andrea • Bookstore1Sarasota
Bookseller recommendation
“This book is really hard to describe well. It is a sharp, biting, and incisive slice of fiction that expertly teases apart the complicated knots of Reid's characters, but it is also a compelling commentary on money, consumption, class, young women in the South, and the ethical obligations we have to one another. It is a slippery book to get a hold on, but it is one that rewards peeling back its many many layers. ”
— Rebecca • Quail Ridge Books
Bookseller recommendation
“I thoroughly enjoyed this book by Kiley Reid. She did a phenomenal job of capturing different perceptions of college life and how the characters cope and grow throughout the novel. This may seem like just a coming of age story, but it is so much more than that. There are a few different main characters and we see how they all intersect deliberately or not so deliberately with each other. This novel reminds me of if someone went to a college campus and stuck random cameras around a dorm; this is what you would get. That being said, this book is 100% character-driven, which I loved. Reid also tackles some very important themes and issues, such as socioeconomic classes and racism. I became extremely invested in the characters and felt a connection to them after finishing the book. 10/10 recommend this was a fun read! ”
— Anna • Underground Books
Bookseller recommendation
“Reading this feels like being unceremoniously dropped into the middle of a residence hall with all the doors thrown open to the everything-all-at-once already happening. An incisive character-driven campus novel with authentic-feeling dialogue and complex issues examined within tight, dorm-sized quarters...read this one for a slice of life that immediately pulls you, tells you all its secrets, then kicks you out again - onto the next.”
— Chelsea • Bromley's Books
Bookseller recommendation
“Loved this unique novel that wrestles with themes of how power and privilege intersect with race and money on a college campus”
— Mika • Singing Pebble Books
Bookseller recommendation
“This was such a fun and dramatic story!! It's usually difficult to keep up with as many characters as this book has, but I really felt I KNEW and recognized every single character in this story. The web of Millie's and Agatha's missteps was so fun to follow, and my jaw was on the literal floor when everything blew up in their faces. Can't wait for more from Kiley Reid!! ”
— Nadi • Lark & Owl
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
National Bestseller
A Good Morning America Book Club Pick
An Indie Next Pick
A LibraryReads Pick
Acclaimed author Kiley Reid’s fresh and provocative story about desire, consumption, and bad behavior.
It's 2017 at the University of Arkansas, and Millie Cousins—a super-senior resident assistant at Belgrade Dormitory—just wants to graduate, get a job, and buy a house. So when Agatha Paul, a writer and visiting professor itching for her next big topic, offers Millie an easy yet unusual opportunity for them to help each other further their own interests, Millie naturally jumps at the chance.
But Millie's starry-eyed hustle quickly becomes jeopardized by a lonely transfer student, unruly residents, and illicit intrigue. Both Millie and Agatha are forced to question just how much of themselves they are willing to trade to get what they want.
Sharp and intimate, Come and Get It, the new thought-provoking, singular novel by the bestselling and critically acclaimed author Kiley Reid, explores the choices we make, particularly for the things that can and cannot be paid for.
Kiley Reid is the author of Such a Fun Age, which was a New York Times bestseller and longlisted for the Booker Prize. Her writing has been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, Playboy, The Guardian, and others. Reid is currently an assistant professor at the University of Michigan.
Reviews
A Best Book of the Year:Vogue • Elle • Betches • Vulture • Harpers Bazaar • NPR
A Most Anticipated Book of the Year:
TIME • Good Housekeeping • Stylecaster • BookPage • LitHub • NYLON • Nerd Daily • Entertainment Weekly • Oprah Daily • Orange County Register • The Root • BookBub • Town & Country • Shondaland • The Week • The Messenger • Electric Lit • The Mary Sue • Scary Mommy • PureWow
One of Southern Review of Books’ Best Southern Books of January
One of Town and Country’s Best Books of January
One of BookBub’s Best Winter Books
One of Woman’s World’s Best Books Club Books
One of Essence Magazine’s Must-Reads Books
One of New York Post’s Best New Books
One of Harpers Bazaar's Best Beach Reads of 2024
One of W Magazine's Best Books of 2024
One of CrimeReads' Greatest Campus Novels Ever Written
One of Glamour's Best Books for Book Clubs in 2024
A People Magazine Book of the Week
A New Yorker Best Book of the Week
A Harpers Bazaar Book Chat February Pick
One of BookPage's Best Audiobooks of 2024
One of The Washington Post's 10 Best Audiobooks of 2024
"[Come and Get It] tackles money, privilege, race, and power dynamics. . . . This is a book that is begging to be discussed as Kiley explores these topics and leaves readers to draw their own conclusions." —Glamour
"A sharp, edgy, social novel. . . Reid is a genius of mimicry and social observation." —WYPR
"[A] snappy page-turner. . . [with] apt depictions of contemporary southern culture." —NPR
"Come and Get It is tense and often uncomfortable, pulling readers in with a sense of horrified fascination as they see the boundaries that people will push to make money in the current economic climate." —Book Riot
"Fascinating. . . You will not be able to predict where the story will go, but the journey to get there was completely riveting." —Book Riot
"[A] humorous examination of consumerism, race, and yearning." —Bitter Southerner
"Reid’s sophomore novel, is about a residential assistant at the University of Arkansas, and I can’t wait to see how Reid applies her sharp social commentary to the messy power dynamics of academia. I’ll be packing it in my carry-on." —Carley Fortune, USA Today's "10 Best Beach Reads"
"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." —Glamour
"Come and Get It is filled with incisive observations on the different versions of the American dream that drive us, and how we each choose to get there." —W Magazine
"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
"Grapple[s] with the heady concepts of desire, privilege, and the rules of social conduct in an environment where the game is rigged and fairness is reserved for a select few. . . . Heavy on character development and social commentary, Come and Get It is the kind of book you put down and immediately want to discuss." —Vulture
"With only a handful of chapters, numerous characters feel fleshed-out and well-rounded. The story gets its hooks in with such subtlety, the reader doesn’t realize how far she’s been pulled in until Come & Get It is well under the skin, the characters staying for days." —BUST Magazine
"Reid’s skillful storytelling and vibrant characters are sure to give you a great time." —BookRiot
"Reid really shines. The dialogue and personalities she created for each dorm resident, each classmate and each parent are so complete, it's like tuning into a juicy reality show already in progress. . . . Consumerism, race, desire, grief and growth are key themes in Reid's novel, but connection might be the thread through them all." —USA Today
"Amuses and captivates from the first page. . . . Reid crafts a witty and moving vignette of college life, the challenges it poses, and the women who endure them. . . . A clever, accurate portrayal of the immaturity and growth of young adulthood." —The Harvard Crimson
"Reid’s novels are interested in recognizing the pervasiveness of this economic approach to life, exploring its consequences, and trying to think past it. . . . Another opportunity to think about important social issues from a welcome new angle." —Chicago Review of Books
"Reid creates a story with real weight. Her ear for dialogue [is] finely tuned. It feels like you’re reading great gossip, but the characters come across as genuine, with real problems. Come and Get It is a fun, propulsive read that puts readers in a world most of them will have long since graduated from, but which provides an ideal window to explore deeper themes — from relationships to class and privilege to racism." —Associated Press
"The story unfurls like a magic trick, its breeziness disguising an incisive and damning exploration of economics and ethics in America. . . . Reid is a social observer of the highest order, knowing exactly when a small detail or beat of dialogue will resonate beyond the confines of the scene. . . . It’s a testament to Reid’s gifts that . . . she never judges her characters. Her world, like the real one, is populated by people whose shortsightedness lives alongside good intentions. . . . With her perceptive eye and ear, Reid imbues her novel with the stuff, literally and figuratively, of life. . . . Her characters feel unique, often lovable — and always human. Money drives them in the way it drives us all, and that’s the beauty (and the terror) of Reid’s point. With her remarkable examination of American monoculture — from fast food to pop culture to handed-down ideals — she tells a story about economics that’s neither poverty porn nor finance fantasy. Instead, it’s about the hows and whys of everyday consumerism and the insidious toll it takes on our lives. . . . 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." —The New York Times Book Review
"Reid nails the anxiety about the future (and the present) for some students and the unperturbed overconfidence for others, depending largely on who has needed to develop defenses and who has not. That, of course, means taking into account the contexts of race and class and sexuality, as well as social skills and trauma history. She nails the heightened interpersonal conflicts that grow in cramped shared rooms like mildew on the walls. She burrows deeply into one young woman's pain and the lessons she learns about what it means to have other people invited into that pain to be spectators." —NPR
"A thrilling, delectable look at wealth, privilege, and desire." —People Magazine
"Clever . . . Beginning with an interview of these young women could easily have felt like the laziest kind of exposition, but in Reid’s hands it serves as a brilliant demonstration of her own approach as a novelist: Listen. . . . The key is Reid’s exquisitely calibrated tone . . . She’s so good at capturing both the syrupy support and catty criticism these young women swap, and yet she also demonstrates a profound understanding of their fears and anxieties. Not to mention she gathers accents and verbal quirks like she’s picking delicate fruit. . . . You’re in the presence of 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!" —The Washington Post
"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
"Juicy—naturally—but poignant, this highly anticipated return from the Such a Fun Age author is sure to get tongues wagging." —Elle
"Reid employs her signature sharp eye and sardonic wit to spear academia in Come and Get It, a biting comedy of manners.” —Entertainment Weekly
"Such A Fun Age still occupies space in my brain for its incisive brilliance. Reid’s highly-anticipated second novel Come and Get It tackles themes of consumption and reckless abandon." —Nylon
"Reid makes a strong return with her biting and smart new novel." —Shondaland
"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
"Clear and artfully expressed . . . [Reid] is very good at sketching a scene." —The Wall Street Journal
"This new book promises all the same ability at depth and poignancy through a fun, plotty story... It’s a perfect recipe for a great January read: in a college setting, about discretion and desire, about money, want, and, most importantly, it’s by Kiley Reid." —LitHub
"Kiley Reid is a great writer. Full stop. Her observations and point of view make even the most mundane moments, like a few students meeting for a focus group in college, feel reexamined and truly original….[A] captivating read that fans will gobble up.” —GoodMorningAmerica.com
"Kiley Reid, author of Such a Fun Age, returns with another incisive novel everyone will be talking about. . . . A riveting and fascinating tale." —Town & Country
"The story gets its hooks in with such subtlety, the reader doesn’t realize how far she’s been pulled in until Come & Get It is well under the skin, the characters staying for days." —BUST Magazine
"Entertaining gems of insight . . . [A] meaningful cultural analysis and critique of young Black and white women’s financial and consumer lives." —Minneapolis Star Tribune
"[An] edgy and fiercely funny social novel . . . A virtuoso of adept observation, Reid once again delivers fiction with a sharp eye for social commentary, all while efficaciously mesmerizing the reader with her sublime sardonic wit from beginning to end." —Stylecaster
"[A] wild romp . . . offering up a comically horrifying climax." —Ebony Magazine
"A sharp, fascinating story . . . Another sharply written coming-of-age story about a group of women living in and around a college campus and the micro- and macro-aggressions that inform their relationships and conflicts.” —Woman’s World
"Stellar commentary on class, astute social observation, and lots of wit." —Scary Mommy
"The vibrant and brilliantly written coming-of-age story about ‘money, indiscretion, and bad behavior.’ . . . A page-turner." —Essence Magazine
"Another incisive novel everyone will be talking about. . . A riveting and fascinating tale." —Town & Country
"A story of indiscretions and gray areas, power dynamics, and privilege that’s wound as tight as a violin string." —Good Housekeeping
"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
"[A] sharp, edgy social novel. . . Reid has the very same obsessions she gives her character Agatha, and the guilty pleasure of the book is the way she nails the characters’ speech styles, Southern accents, and behavior and her unerring choice of products and other accoutrements to surround them with. . . . Reid is a genius of mimicry and social observation.” —Kirkus Reviews
"Reid returns after her smash hit Such a Fun Age with 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)
"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. . . . Reid has a ready and eager audience for her second novel, and the word is out." —Booklist
"Reid offers an illuminating study of power, responsibility, and the bad choices we sometimes make, written in the fresh, bright language for which she’s known. . . . What’s most remarkable here is the grace and understanding the author shows her characters. . . . An emotionally intense exploration of power dynamics within relationships that doesn’t settle for easy villains and victims." —Library Journal
"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, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Happy Place
"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
"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 Expand reviews