Cover Image: The Guest

The Guest

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Member Reviews

Boy, do I have grumbles about Emma Cline’s "The Guest." It frustrated me to no end.

For 300 pages, Alex grifts and drifts from person to person on Long Island after being kicked out by the older man she’s been living with. We know nothing of her history, other than she’s done a bad thing to some guy named Dom. All we know is that she believes if she can hold out until Labor Day, the older man will welcome her back . Hence, all the grifting and drifting. She’s just biding her time to return to her boyfriend.

In the meantime, we discover that Alex is a mess. She has no home, no job, few morals, and a strong talent for molding her personality into many different types of women. This makes her interesting enough as a character, I suppose – plus the fact that she has zero qualms about lying, cheating, and stealing – but the emotional destruction she leaves in her wake is unsettling. Her survival comes first; everyone else comes second.

The problem is, nothing really happens in the book. And even though something about Alex’s trainwreck of a life propelled me to keep reading, I never stopped waiting for something to happen. I waited and waited and waited.

And then when the final, climactic moment did arrive, again nothing happened, because the book ended in the abruptest way possible. I tried to advance to the next page on my Kindle numerous times, but I couldn’t. There were no more words to read, no matter how much I wanted to read them.

I get what Cline was going for with the ending, and with the novel as a whole, but it didn’t work for me. Not in the slightest.


My sincerest appreciation to Emma Cline, Random House Publishing Group, and NetGalley for the digital review copy. All opinions included herein are my own.

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I gotta be honest, this one was a major flop for me. I really wanted to like it too. The summary sounded so interesting & had me hooked. But, the main character, Alex, annoyed me so much. Like no matter how hard I tried, there was no liking her.

It’s one of those books where a lot is happening, but at the same time nothing is happening. I realize that makes no sense, but that’s the best way I can describe it hahah mainly because I’m not too sure I even know what I read.

The major thing that annoyed me was that right when I was getting into it, and starting to give it a chance, it ended & I was left with so many unanswered questions. I feel like that was intentional, but that’s a no from me dawg…

Even though this wasn’t for me, it could still be your jam, as most of the reviews I’ve seen have been positive!

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This was an excellent, if sometimes difficult to stomach book. It follows a 22 year old sex worker named Alex who is ejected from her rich, older boyfriend's house after a faux pas at a fancy dinner. Rather than return to Manhattan, she drifts around Long Island, making connections and burning bridges, ingratiating herself into people's lives and just as quickly losing their favor. All the while, she is evading an ex boyfriend who she seems to have stolen money from. She makes terrible decisions in pursuit of an ill-advised goal - that of returning to the rich boyfriend who has tired of her. The book forces you to ask yourself several really interesting questions:
-Do women have to have a traumatic back story in order to become the kind of person that makes these choices?
-What kind of society, and what kind of people, makes these choices seem viable to a young woman?
As always, Emma Cline's prose is beautiful and I would read anything she writes.

Thanks to NetGalley and Random House for the free ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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THE GUEST is a mesmerizing novel that delves deep into the life of Alex, a young woman who finds herself lost and without direction on Long Island after parting ways with her wealthy, older summer fling. Cline masterfully captures the essence of the lazy summer ambience, painting vivid images with her words. Despite the unhurried pace and the lack of a definite plot, readers are kept on the edge of their seats, sensing an impending sense of doom that keeps them engrossed and eagerly turning the pages. Impending sense of doom is my FAVORITE trope, and so I was all here for it.

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I think Emma Cline just isn't for me. I read her debut previously and also rated it 3 stars. I think she does a really good job writing morally gray characters but the main character in this seemingly didn't have any motives whatsoever. She just was doing bad things just.... cuz? I did enjoy the stream of conciousness POV, but this just wasn't the book for me. I normally love bad characters that do bad things but I need them to be doing it for a good reason.

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Alex is kicked out of the house she is staying in as summer comes to a close on Long Island. She is left with just a bag with all of her belongings, since she is no longer welcome at her old place and is receiving a lot of texts from a man she took advantage of. Luckily, Alex is great at manipulating others to get what she wants. The book traces a week of Alex's life as she lies and cheats her way around Long Island while waiting for a Labor Day party.

This book strikes a great balance between keeping the reader very close to the stressful decisions Alex is making as she moves from group to group, but also keeping the reader far away from Alex's past and inner thoughts. Alex is a fascinating central character, and a lot of the book was great fun watching her get into complex situations with manipulation and deception and have to use those same skills to get out of them. The book reads almost like a series of connected short stories as she moves through different groups, with some definitely being more tense or engaging (my personal favorite was her escapade in befriending a child on the beach). Through Alex, Emma Cline does a great job dissecting the lives and identities of the upper crust who live on Long Island and who Alex is able to so easily control. Overall, this is a breezy, interesting book that did not come all the way together for me and left me wanting a bit more, but Emma Cline's prose is so easy to read it makes the book go down more easily.

Thank you to NetGalley and Randon House for a copy of The Guest in exchange for an honest review.

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What in the drug-induced fever dream?

I really had higher hopes for this one because I loved The Girls. This book was wild and not in a good way. We follow Alex as she fakes her way into the late-summer WASPy life of a sugar baby. While you have to admire her tenacity, it's almost surreal how much she gets away with. At the same time, it's a testament to how much we are willing to try to get away with when we are desperate. To me Alex is desperate to escape the danger of her past, to not be homeless(?!?!), and to find the guy to save her.

With the same atmospheric bewilderment that you find in Ottessa Moshfegh's My Year of Rest and Relaxation, Emma Cline, creates a narrative that you can't look away from. Even though Alex is in a situation of her own making, you have to acknowledge that sometimes various decisions can lead to a person in too deep and needing to escape by any means necessary. Although this main character irritated me to no end, you end up rooting for her. We are left with a vague ending so I hope she is well!

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4.5 Starts - I’ve had this for a long time and was afraid to read it because I loved the girls so much. I really regret waiting so long - this is just as great as her others, but this means it will be extremely polarizing. I think you should only read this if you like feeling a little anxious and also like books where nothing happens. I knocked of .5 because the ending was confusing though I think this was intentional

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I love a story about a twenty-something feeling just doing her best as an adult and this story was no exception.

Did I feel tempted to live the same way? At times…yes haha. Not sure what that says about me!

This was my first Emma Cline story and I’d only ever heard good things about her writing and her characters, and all the rumours are true.

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Emma Cline is a talented writer - like her earlier book “The Girls” she really knows how to create an atmosphere.

Not one character in “The Guest” is really likable including Alex, the central character who at age 22 is a drifter, a grifter. We don’t know much about her and her life is lived with no plan; on the edge of being kicked out by her roommates for failing to pay the rent, she winds up being the paramour of much older Simon in his luxurious Hamptons home. Until she angers him and he asks her to leave. Convinced if she ca. just make it for 6 days until his big Labor Day party where she imagines he will then welcome her back, the remainder of the book is her somehow managing to survive / attach herself to others for the week. It all feels like a drug-hazed (as it often is for Alex) yet completely tense, propulsive read. I couldn’t put it down.

Now please can we talk about the ending?? Without a spoiler, I needed more!

Thanks to Netgalley for the ARC. Ready to read some reviews that DO have spoilers to discuss!

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A fascinating read, but definitely disturbing and (don’t worry I won’t spoil it), an ambiguous ending. Emma Cline draws her characters sharply and beautifully, and the visuals worked well. I felt invested. All in all, for a certain audience this is a great read.but I didn’t care for the ending.

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Very quick read and very easy to get into. It was hard to feel any sympathy for Alex though and I found myself getting annoyed at all her choices. But yet, I still wanted to see what happened next.

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I gave this book 2 stars out of respect to the author. Unfortunately I didn’t find much redeeming value in a story about a ne’er do well woman (Alex) who, just by looking at the cover, who in my opinion has her hand out and open looking for it to be filled-perhaps with money, drugs or valuables all of which she has bilked or stolen from several men-one of whom is relentlessly pursuing her for money. We know nothing about her background and the ending falls flat.

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This new release, from the author of The Girls, follows a young woman as she spirals into destructive behavior during a summer visit to Long Island.

The writing is descriptive, and the plot focuses on the characters. Any action in the story feels secondary to the main character's descent into desperation. Like a trainwreck, I couldn't look away.

And the ending...I typically don't like open-ended conclusions, but in this case, it was the perfect choice.

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This is one of those books where something IS going on, but I had the sneaking suspicion I was NOT gonna get to the bottom of it!
This experience made left me with a deep and all consuming sense of dread. It’d and end of summer book, and end of the road book, and end of an era book. Lots of things coming to a close here, this book made me so nervous, soooo much lying and manipulation and deflection. Great read, great summer book for those who like their beach reads with some edge.
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher, Random House, for providing me with a copy of the book in exchange for this honest review!!

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A fever dream of a book. Emma Cline manages to draw just a few days at the languid end of summer into a tense novel about a young woman on the brink. A brutal commentary on class, wealth, and the lengths at which we go to survive.

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The Guest by Emma Cline is a delicious character study set over a steamy summer in the Hamptons. We meet Alex, a drifter and a con, who keeps you on edge and on your toes for the duration of the book. Cline did a fantastic job presenting a very creepy and atmospheric story that also felt somehow light. I loved it! Highly recommend to all readers, can't imagine a better use of time than plopping down in a chair outside and reading this in a sitting.

Thank you to Netgalley and Random House for the ARC - The Guest is out now!

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Emma Cline’s ‘The Guest’ is a suspenseful journey of a young woman named Alex who is trying to masquerade in the world of the rich. Alex‘s ability to deceive those around her allows for her to gain access to money and parties. Her vulnerability and desperation can be felt with every encounter she has with people. She wants to be able to belong in a world where she has a safe space to rest her head every night. She wants to be able to connect with those around her. However, she always seems to find a way push the boundaries of those who provide her with security.

This book is short and yet somehow it keeps the reader in suspense from the first page. You find yourself rooting for Alex even though she continually manipulates those around her. And yet there is something about her longing to belong somewhere that struck me. As a reader, I wanted her to be able to find that one person she could rely on. Emma Cline was able to create such a complex and imperfect main character that resonated with me. As humans, we tend to push away the people that we need the most.

Thank you so much to Netgalley and Random House Publishers for a copy of this book in exchange for a review.

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"The Guest" follows 22-year-old Alex, the epitome of a grifter. She's spent most of her summer staying with an older man, Simon, at his East End Long Island house. At this point, she exhausted all the resources of her life in the city and has nowhere else to go. Then, after acting out at a dinner party, Simon suggests Alex’s stay has come to an end and suggests she leaves. For some reason, Alex comes to the conclusion that Simon actually wants her to come back for his Labor Day party. So, Alex has six days to kill without any plans or anywhere to stay.
Author Emma Cline's writing here is fantastic. The languid summer setting is immaculate and I was enthralled by Alex's antics. However, the plot is a bit lackluster and meandering. I also have lots of thoughts about the ending, but I won't delve into here.
Thank you to Netgalley and Random House for providing an advance reader copy in exchange for my honest review.

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this one is an absolute fever dream in the best way possible. it’s like a good 90s indie movie that leaves you sad, but in a beautiful way.

highlights:
• unreliable narrator
• unlikable characters
• constant plot suspense
• well-paced, beautiful writing
• ending that will leave you speechless

Alex was incredibly unlikable & unreliable, but I found myself rooting for her despite the anxiety she gave me. I loved the ending; it was unexpected and left me thinking about it for awhile.

this is the first book I’ve read by emma & I will absolutely be reading more. daddy is on my shelf + I’m itching to pick it up next.

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